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Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2014

Safety and efficacy of the peptide-based therapeutic vaccine for HIV-1, Vacc-4x: a phase 2 randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.

Richard B. Pollard; Jürgen K. Rockstroh; Giuseppe Pantaleo; David M. Asmuth; Barry Peters; Adriano Lazzarin; Felipe García; Kim Ellefsen; Daniel Podzamczer; Jan van Lunzen; Keikawus Arastéh; Dirk Schürmann; Bonaventura Clotet; W. David Hardy; Ronald T. Mitsuyasu; Graeme Moyle; Andreas Plettenberg; Martin Fisher; Gerd Fätkenheuer; Margaret A. Fischl; Babafemi Taiwo; Ingebjørg Baksaas; Darren Jolliffe; Stefan Persson; Øyvind Jelmert; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja A. Sommerfelt; Vidar Wendel-Hansen; Birger Sørensen

BACKGROUND Present combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) alone does not cure HIV infection and requires lifelong drug treatment. The potential role of HIV therapeutic vaccines as part of an HIV cure is under consideration. Our aim was to assess the efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity of Vacc-4x, a peptide-based HIV-1 therapeutic vaccine targeting conserved domains on p24(Gag), in adults infected with HIV-1. METHODS Between July, 2008, and June, 2010, we did a multinational double-blind, randomised, phase 2 study comparing Vacc-4x with placebo. Participants were adults infected with HIV-1 who were aged 18-55 years and virologically suppressed on cART (viral load <50 copies per mL) with CD4 cell counts of 400 × 10(6) cells per L or greater. The trial was done at 18 sites in Germany, Italy, Spain, the UK, and the USA. Participants were randomly assigned (2:1) to Vacc-4x or placebo. Group allocation was masked from participants and investigators. Four primary immunisations, weekly for 4 weeks, containing Vacc-4x (or placebo) were given intradermally after administration of adjuvant. Booster immunisations were given at weeks 16 and 18. At week 28, cART was interrupted for up to 24 weeks. The coprimary endpoints were cART resumption and changes in CD4 counts during treatment interruption. Analyses were by modified intention to treat: all participants who received one intervention. Furthermore, safety, viral load, and immunogenicity (as measured by ELISPOT and proliferation assays) were assessed. The 52 week follow-up period was completed in June, 2011. For the coprimary endpoints the proportion of participants who met the criteria for cART resumption was analysed with a logistic regression model with the treatment effect being assessed in a model including country as a covariate. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00659789. FINDINGS 174 individuals were screened; because of slow recruitment, enrolment stopped with 136 of a planned 345 participants and 93 were randomly assigned to receive Vacc-4x and 43 to receive placebo. There were no differences between the two groups for the primary efficacy endpoints in those participants who stopped cART at week 28. Of the participants who resumed cART, 30 (34%) were in the Vacc-4x group and 11 (29%) in the placebo group, and percentage changes in CD4 counts were not significant (mean treatment difference -5·71, 95% CI -13·01 to 1·59). However, a significant difference in viral load was noted for the Vacc-4x group both at week 48 (median 23,100 copies per mL Vacc-4x vs 71,800 copies per mL placebo; p=0·025) and week 52 (median 19,550 copies per mL vs 51,000 copies per mL; p=0·041). One serious adverse event, exacerbation of multiple sclerosis, was reported as possibly related to study treatment. Vacc-4x was immunogenic, inducing proliferative responses in both CD4 and CD8 T-cell populations. INTERPRETATION The proportion of participants resuming cART before end of study and change in CD4 counts during the treatment interruption showed no benefit of vaccination. Vacc-4x was safe, well tolerated, immunogenic, seemed to contribute to a viral-load setpoint reduction after cART interruption, and might be worth consideration in future HIV-cure investigative strategies. FUNDING Norwegian Research Council GLOBVAC Program and Bionor Pharma ASA.


EBioMedicine | 2017

Cell-Mediated Immune Predictors of Vaccine Effect on Viral Load and CD4 Count in a Phase 2 Therapeutic HIV-1 Vaccine Clinical Trial

Yunda Huang; Giuseppe Pantaleo; Gonzalo Tapia; Brittany Sanchez; Lily Zhang; Monica Trondsen; Arnt Ove Hovden; Richard B. Pollard; Jürgen K. Rockstroh; Mats Ökvist; Maja A. Sommerfelt

Background In a placebo-controlled trial of the peptide-based therapeutic HIV-1 p24Gag vaccine candidate Vacc-4x, participants on combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) received six immunizations over 18 weeks, followed by analytical treatment interruption (ATI) between weeks 28 and 52. Cell-mediated immune responses were investigated as predictors of Vacc-4x effect (VE) on viral load (VL) and CD4 count during ATI. Methods All analyses of week 28 responses and fold-changes relative to baseline considered per-protocol participants (Vacc-4x:placebo = 72:32) resuming cART after week 40. Linear regression models with interaction tests were used. VE was estimated as the Vacc-4x–placebo difference in log10-transformed VL (VEVL) or CD4 count (VECD4). Findings A lower fold-change of CD4+ T-cell proliferation was associated with VECD4 at week 48 (p = 0.036, multiplicity adjusted q = 0.036) and week 52 (p = 0.040, q = 0.080). A higher fold-change of IFN-γ in proliferation supernatants was associated with VEVL at week 44 (p = 0.047, q = 0.07). A higher fold-change of TNF-α was associated with VEVL at week 44 (p = 0.045, q = 0.070), week 48 (p = 0.028, q = 0.070), and week 52 (p = 0.037, q = 0.074). A higher fold-change of IL-6 was associated with VEVL at week 48 (p = 0.017, q = 0.036). TNF-α levels (> median) were associated with VECD4 at week 48 (p = 0.009, q = 0.009). Interpretation These exploratory analyses highlight the potential value of investigating biomarkers in T-cell proliferation supernatants for VE in clinical studies.


Archive | 2013

Method for the vaccination against hiv

Lars H. Høie; Anker Lundemose; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold; Vidar Wendel Hansen; Birger Sørensen


Archive | 2015

METHOD FOR REDUCING AND/OR DELAYING PATHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS I (HIV) OR FOR REDUCING THE RISK OF DEVELOPING ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME (AIDS)

Anker Lundemose; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold


Archive | 2016

DOSAGE REGIMEN FOR HIV VACCINE

Anker Lundemose; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold


Archive | 2016

Schéma posologique pour un vaccin contre le vih

Anker Lundemose; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold


Archive | 2015

Procédé permettant de réduire et/ou de retarder les effets pathologiques du virus de l'immunodéficience humaine i (vih) ou de réduire le risque de développer le syndrome d'immunodéficience acquise (sida)

Anker Lundemose; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold


Archive | 2013

Vaccin contre le vih

Birger Sørensen; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold; Lars H. Høie; Anker Lundemose; Vidar Wendel Hansen


Archive | 2013

Peptides derived from viral proteins for use as immunogens and dosage reactants

Birger Sørensen; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold


Archive | 2013

Peptide aus viralen proteinen zur verwendung als immunogene und dosierungsreagenzien

Birger Sørensen; Mats Ökvist; Arnt Ove Hovden; Maja Sommerfelt Grønvold

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Birger Sørensen

University Medical Center Groningen

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Brittany Sanchez

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Lily Zhang

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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