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About
The primary objective of the proposed phase I trial is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of DNA-HIV-PT123 and AIDSVAX®B/E combination regimen. Though both DNA-HIV-PT123 and AIDSVAX®B/E and the combination of the two vaccines have been evaluated in humans and have shown to be safe and well tolerated, this is the first time the combination regimen is being evaluated in HIV-1 uninfected African populations with and without S. mansoni. The secondary objective of the trial is to evaluate the effect of S. mansoni infection on the immunogenicity of the combination of DNA-HIV-PT123 and AIDSVAX® B/E vaccine regimen. Successful vaccination against most viruses requires efficient Th1 response. There is evidence that helminth infections skew the host immune system of human and animals to T-helper type 2 (Th2) and induce immunosuppression. Therefore, there is a potential that helminth infected populations may not generate the desired immune responses to vaccines designed to drive Th1-type and cytotoxic T-cell responses.
Furthermore, the influence of helminth infections on the development of protective antibody responses remains unclear. Limited data in animal models suggests that worm infections reduced efficacy of vaccines.
The proposed vaccine trial will generate safety, tolerability and immunogenicity data of a vaccination regimen with simultaneous administration of a candidate HIV DNA vaccine (DNA-HIV-PT123) and a gp120 protein vaccine (AIDSVAX®B/E). This will be the first HIV vaccine trial to prospectively evaluate the impact of the S. mansoni infection on safety and immune responses to HIV vaccines.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
HIV-1 infection
Infection with other helminths
Symptomatic and asymptomatic malaria infection (presence of malaria parasites on thick blood smear)
Treatment with praziquantel in the past 3 months
S. mansoni egg count of>2000 eggs per gram of stool
Clinically significant acute or chronic illness at the time of randomization.
Any clinically relevant abnormality on history or examination
Use of immunosuppressive medication (other than inhaled or topical immunosuppressants)
Receipt of immunoglobulin within past 60 days
Abnormal laboratory values as specified below from blood collected within 28 days prior to randomization:
Hematology
Chemistry
Urinalysis: abnormal dipstick confirmed by microscopy
Reported high-risk behaviour for HIV infection within 3 months prior to first vaccination, as defined by:
History or evidence of autoimmune disease.
Positive for Hepatitis B surface antigen (HbsAg), positive for antibodies to Hepatitis C virus (HCV) or active syphilis.
Receipt of blood or blood products within the previous 6 months
History of severe allergic reactions to any substance requiring hospitalization or emergency medical care (e.g. Steven-Johnson syndrome, bronchospasm or hypotension)
Prior or current participation in another investigational agent trial
Current anti-tuberculosis (TB) prophylaxis or therapy
If female, currently pregnant (positive serum or urine pregnancy test), planning to get pregnant in the next 9months or lactating
History or evidence of any systemic disease or any acute or chronic illness that, in the opinion of the investigator, may compromise the volunteer's safety or interfere with the evaluation of the safety or immunogenicity of the vaccine
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
72 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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