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Featured researches published by Robin Mogg.


The Lancet | 2008

Efficacy assessment of a cell-mediated immunity HIV-1 vaccine (the Step Study): a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, test-of-concept trial.

Susan Buchbinder; Devan V. Mehrotra; Ann Duerr; Daniel W. Fitzgerald; Robin Mogg; David Li; Peter B. Gilbert; Javier R. Lama; Michael Marmor; Carlos del Rio; M. Juliana McElrath; Danilo R. Casimiro; Keith M. Gottesdiener; Jeff Chodakewitz; Lawrence Corey; Michael N. Robertson

BACKGROUND Observational data and non-human primate challenge studies suggest that cell-mediated immune responses might provide control of HIV replication. The Step Study directly assessed the efficacy of a cell-mediated immunity vaccine to protect against HIV-1 infection or change in early plasma HIV-1 levels. METHODS We undertook a double-blind, phase II, test-of-concept study at 34 sites in North America, the Caribbean, South America, and Australia. We randomly assigned 3000 HIV-1-seronegative participants by computer-generated assignments to receive three injections of MRKAd5 HIV-1 gag/pol/nef vaccine (n=1494) or placebo (n=1506). Randomisation was prestratified by sex, adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) antibody titre at baseline, and study site. Primary objective was a reduction in HIV-1 acquisition rates (tested every 6 months) or a decrease in HIV-1 viral-load setpoint (early plasma HIV-1 RNA measured 3 months after HIV-1 diagnosis). Analyses were per protocol and modified intention to treat. The study was stopped early because it unexpectedly met the prespecified futility boundaries at the first interim analysis. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00095576. FINDINGS In a prespecified interim analysis in participants with baseline Ad5 antibody titre 200 or less, 24 (3%) of 741 vaccine recipients became HIV-1 infected versus 21 (3%) of 762 placebo recipients (hazard ratio [HR] 1.2 [95% CI 0.6-2.2]). All but one infection occurred in men. The corresponding geometric mean plasma HIV-1 RNA was comparable in infected male vaccine and placebo recipients (4.61 vs 4.41 log(10) copies per mL, one tailed p value for potential benefit 0.66). The vaccine elicited interferon-gamma ELISPOT responses in 75% (267) of the 25% random sample of all vaccine recipients (including both low and high Ad5 antibody titres) on whose specimens this testing was done (n=354). In exploratory analyses of all study volunteers, irrespective of baseline Ad5 antibody titre, the HR of HIV-1 infection between vaccine and placebo recipients was higher in Ad5 seropositive men (HR 2.3 [95% CI 1.2-4.3]) and uncircumcised men (3.8 [1.5-9.3]), but was not increased in Ad5 seronegative (1.0 [0.5-1.9]) or circumcised (1.0 [0.6-1.7]) men. INTERPRETATION This cell-mediated immunity vaccine did not prevent HIV-1 infection or reduce early viral level. Mechanisms for insufficient efficacy of the vaccine and the increased HIV-1 infection rates in subgroups of vaccine recipients are being explored.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008

Safety and Immunogenicity of a Replication-Incompetent Adenovirus Type 5 HIV-1 Clade B gag/pol/nef Vaccine in Healthy Adults

Frances Priddy; Deborah D. Brown; James G. Kublin; Kathleen Monahan; David P. Wright; Jacob Lalezari; Steven Santiago; Michael Marmor; Michelle Lally; Richard M. Novak; Stephen Brown; Priya Kulkarni; Sheri A. Dubey; Lisa S. Kierstead; Danilo R. Casimiro; Robin Mogg; Mark J. DiNubile; John W. Shiver; Randi Leavitt; Michael N. Robertson; Devan V. Mehrotra; Erin Quirk

BACKGROUND The safety and immunogenicity of the MRK adenovirus type 5 human immunodeficiency virus type 1 clade B gag/pol/nef vaccine, a replication-incompetent adenovirus type 5-vectored vaccine designed to elicit cell-mediated immunity against conserved human immunodeficiency virus proteins, was assessed in a phase 1 trial. METHODS Healthy adults not infected with human immunodeficiency virus were enrolled in a multicenter, dose-escalating, blind, placebo-controlled study to evaluate a 3-dose homologous prime-boost regimen of the trivalent MRK adenovirus type 5 human immunodeficiency virus type 1 vaccine containing from 3 x 10(6) to 1 x 10(11) viral particles per 1-mL dose administered on day 1, during week 4 and during week 26. Adverse events were recorded for 29 days after each intradeltoid injection. The primary immunogenicity end point was the proportion of study participants with a positive unfractionated Gag-, Pol-, or Nef-specific interferon-gamma enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot response measured 4 weeks after administration of the last dose. RESULTS Of 259 randomized individuals, 257 (99%) received > or = 1 dose of vaccine or placebo and were included in the safety analyses. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot results were available for 217 study participants (84%) at week 30. No serious vaccine-related adverse events occurred. No study participant discontinued participation because of vaccine-related adverse events. The frequency of injection-site reactions was dose dependent. Vaccine doses of > or = 3 x 10(9) viral particles elicited positive enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot responses to > or = 1 vaccine component in > 60% of recipients. High baseline antibody titers against adenovirus type 5 diminished enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot responses at all doses except the 3 x 10(10) viral particle dose. CONCLUSIONS The vaccine was generally well tolerated and induced cell-mediated immune responses against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 peptides in most healthy adults. Despite these findings, vaccination in a proof-of-concept trial with use of this vaccine was discontinued because of lack of efficacy.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

Intensification of Statin Therapy Results in a Rapid Reduction in Atherosclerotic Inflammation Results of a Multicenter Fluorodeoxyglucose-Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography Feasibility Study

Ahmed Tawakol; Zahi A. Fayad; Robin Mogg; Achilles Alon; Michael Klimas; Hayes M. Dansky; Sharath Subramanian; Amr Abdelbaky; James H.F. Rudd; Michael E. Farkouh; Irene Nunes; Chan Beals; Sudha S. Shankar

OBJECTIVES The study sought to test whether high-dose statin treatment would result in greater reductions in plaque inflammation than low-dose statins, using fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computed tomographic imaging (FDG-PET/CT). BACKGROUND Intensification of statin therapy reduces major cardiovascular events. METHODS Adults with risk factors or with established atherosclerosis, who were not taking high-dose statins (n = 83), were randomized to atorvastatin 10 versus 80 mg in a double-blind, multicenter trial. FDG-PET/CT imaging of the ascending thoracic aorta and carotid arteries was performed at baseline, 4, and 12 weeks after randomization and target-to-background ratio (TBR) of FDG uptake within the artery wall was assessed while blinded to time points and treatment. RESULTS Sixty-seven subjects completed the study, providing imaging data for analysis. At 12 weeks, inflammation (TBR) in the index vessel was significantly reduced from baseline with atorvastatin 80 mg (% reduction [95% confidence interval]: 14.42% [8.7% to 19.8%]; p < 0.001), but not atorvastatin 10 mg (% reduction: 4.2% [-2.3% to 10.4%]; p > 0.1). Atorvastatin 80 mg resulted in significant additional relative reductions in TBR versus atorvastatin 10 mg (10.6% [2.2% to 18.3%]; p = 0.01) at week 12. Reductions from baseline in TBR were seen as early as 4 weeks after randomization with atorvastatin 10 mg (6.4% reduction, p < 0.05) and 80 mg (12.5% reduction, p < 0.001). Changes in TBR did not correlate with lipid profile changes. CONCLUSIONS Statin therapy produced significant rapid dose-dependent reductions in FDG uptake that may represent changes in atherosclerotic plaque inflammation. FDG-PET imaging may be useful in detecting early treatment effects in patients at risk or with established atherosclerosis.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2007

Detection of HIV vaccine-induced cell-mediated immunity in HIV-seronegative clinical trial participants using an optimized and validated enzyme-linked immunospot assay.

Sheri A. Dubey; James H. Clair; Tong-Ming Fu; Liming Guan; Romnie Long; Robin Mogg; Kiersten Anderson; Kelly Collins; Christine Gaunt; V. Rose Fernandez; Lan Zhu; Lisa S. Kierstead; Scott Thaler; Swati B. Gupta; Walter L. Straus; Devan V. Mehrotra; Timothy W. Tobery; Danilo R. Casimiro; John W. Shiver

An effective vaccine for HIV is likely to require induction of T-cell-mediated immune responses, and the interferon-γ (IFNγ) enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay has become the most commonly used assay for measuring these responses in vaccine trials. We optimized and validated the HIV ELISPOT assay using an empirical method to establish positivity criteria that results in a ≤1% false-positive rate. Using this assay, we detected a broad range of HIV-specific ELISPOT responses to peptide pools of overlapping 20mers, 15mers, or 9mers in study volunteers receiving DNA- or adenovirus vector-based HIV vaccines and in HIV-seropositive donors. We found that 15mers generally had higher response magnitudes than 20mers and lower false-positive rates than 9mers. These studies show that our validated ELISPOT assay using 15mer peptide pools and the positivity criteria of ≥55 spots per 106 cells and ≥4-fold over mock (negative control) is a sensitive and specific assay for the detection of HIV vaccine-induced cell-mediated immunity.


Statistics in Medicine | 2009

Should baseline be a covariate or dependent variable in analyses of change from baseline in clinical trials

Guanghan F. Liu; Kaifeng Lu; Robin Mogg; Madhuja Mallick; Devan V. Mehrotra

In randomized clinical trials, a pre-treatment measurement is often taken at baseline, and post-treatment effects are measured at several time points post-baseline, say t=1, ..., T. At the end of the trial, it is of interest to assess the treatment effect based on the mean change from baseline at the last time point T. We consider statistical methods for (i) a point estimate and 95 per cent confidence interval for the mean change from baseline at time T for each treatment group, and (ii) a p-value and 95 per cent confidence interval for the between-group difference in the mean change from baseline. The manner in which the baseline responses are used in the analysis influences both the accuracy and the efficiency of items (i) and (ii). In this paper, we will consider the ANCOVA approach with change from baseline as a dependent variable and compare that with a constrained longitudinal data analysis (cLDA) model proposed by Liang and Zeger (Sankhya: Indian J. Stat. (Ser B) 2000; 62:134-148), in which the baseline is modeled as a dependent variable in conjunction with the constraint of a common baseline mean across the treatment groups. Some drawbacks of the ANCOVA model and potential advantages of the cLDA approach are discussed and illustrated using numerical simulations.


Molecular Therapy | 2009

Tolerability of Two Sequential Electroporation Treatments Using MedPulser DNA Delivery System (DDS) in Healthy Adults

Mark S. Wallace; Barbara Evans; Sandra Woods; Robin Mogg; Lei Zhang; Adam C. Finnefrock; Dietmar Rabussay; Michael Fons; John Mallee; Devan V. Mehrotra; Florian Schödel; Luwy Musey

Immunotherapy against infectious agents and malignant tumors requires efficient priming of effector cells through direct expression and/or efficient cross-presentation of antigens by antigen-presenting cells. Electroporation is a new procedure aimed at transiently increasing cell membrane permeability and direct delivery of antigen or antigen-encoding nucleic acids inside targeted cells. We evaluated the tolerability including compliance with repeated electroporation treatments using MedPulser DDS in 24 healthy adults. Pain severity was evaluated at time of electroporation treatment, and at 1, 5, 10, and 20 minutes, and 24 hours thereafter, using two clinically validated questionnaires: McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ) (Present Pain Intensity) and Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). Electroporation treatments were generally well tolerated. Twenty-two out of 24 subjects returned for the second electroporation treatment 14 days after first treatment. Only two subjects reported a treatment-related systemic adverse experience following either electroporation application. For both pain assessment tools, maximum pain and/or discomfort were mostly reported immediately (within 5 minutes) after electroporation; Furthermore, no difference was observed when comparing peak-pain scores after first and second electroporation treatments. This study supports the clinical application of MedPulser DDS for the improvement of antigen-induced immune responses for prophylactic or therapeutic vaccines, especially in gene-based therapies for cancer.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008

HIV Seroconversion without Infection after Receipt of Adenovirus-Vectored HIV Type 1 Vaccine

Erin Quirk; Robin Mogg; Deborah D. Brown; Michelle Lally; Devan V. Mehrotra; Mark J. DiNubile; Michael N. Robertson

BACKGROUND We analyzed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seroresponses from 3 phase I HIV-1 vaccine trials to assess the frequency of vaccine-induced seroconversion. METHODS HIV-1 and HIV-2 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was performed during trials of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5)-vectored clade B HIV-1 monovalent gag and trivalent gag/pol/nef vaccines given to HIV-seronegative adults. Doses were administered at day 1, week 4, and week 26. Results were analyzed by vaccine formulation and dose and were stratified by baseline Ad5 titer. ELISA-positive samples were reflexively tested by Western blotting. RESULTS Overall, 165 (41%) of 406 evaluable vaccine recipients had positive ELISA results but negative PCR results by week 78. Seroconversion rates were directly related to vaccine dose, were inversely related to baseline Ad5 titer, and were unaffected by vaccine valency. One hundred (89%) of 113 evaluable patients with low baseline Ad5 antibody titers (<or=200) who were given >or=1 dose of vaccine with >or=1 x 10(10) gag-containing Ad5 particles per dose experienced seroconversion. Of 163 vaccine recipients who had positive ELISA results and available Western blot results, 150 (92%) had indeterminate results of Western blot, typically involving bands at p24, p40, and/or p55. Thirteen uninfected patients (8%) had equivocally positive Western blot results, usually because of an additional weak glycoprotein 41 band. Env-specific enzyme immunoassay results were falsely positive for 2 uninfected vaccine recipients. CONCLUSIONS Positive ELISA results were similarly common for monovalent and trivalent vaccine recipients. Vaccine dose and baseline Ad5 immunity were major determinants of vaccine-induced seroconversion rates. Corresponding Western blots characteristically showed bands directed only at Gag proteins, which helped to distinguish HIV-uninfected vaccine recipients who experienced seroconversion from true HIV-infected patients. If available, an enzyme immunoassay exclusively targeting proteins not expressed by the vaccine should be the screening test of first choice for vaccine recipients.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2006

Cross-clade reactivity of HIV-1-specific T-cell responses in HIV-1-infected individuals from Botswana and Cameroon

Swati B. Gupta; Christopher T. Mast; Nathan D. Wolfe; Vlad Novitsky; Sheri A. Dubey; Esper G. Kallas; Mauro Schechter; Bernard Mbewe; Eftyhia Vardas; Punee Pitisuttithum; Donald S. Burke; Dan C. Freed; Robin Mogg; Paul M. Coplan; Jon H. Condra; Romnie Long; Kiersten Anderson; Danilo R. Casimiro; John W. Shiver; Walter L. Straus

Summary: An effective HIV type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine will likely require elicitation of broadly reactive cell-mediated immune (CMI) responses against divergent HIV-1 clades. We compared anti-HIV-1 T-cell immune responses among 363 unvaccinated adults infected with diverse HIV-1 clades. Response rates to clade B Gag and/or clade B Nef in Botswana (95%) and Cameroon (98%) were similar when compared with those in countries previously studied, including Brazil (92%), Thailand (96%), South Africa (96%), Malawi (100%), and the United States (100%). Substantial cross-clade cell-mediated immune responses in Botswana and Cameroon confirm previous findings in a larger, more genetically diverse collection of HIV-1 samples.


Lancet Oncology | 2018

Pembrolizumab in patients with thymic carcinoma: a single-arm, single-centre, phase 2 study

Giuseppe Giaccone; Chul Kim; Jillian Thompson; Colleen McGuire; Bhaskar Kallakury; Joeffrey J Chahine; Maria Manning; Robin Mogg; Wendy M. Blumenschein; Ming Tan; Deepa Suresh Subramaniam; Stephen V. Liu; Ian M Kaplan; Justine N. McCutcheon

BACKGROUND Treatment options are limited for patients with thymic carcinoma. These aggressive tumours are not typically associated with paraneoplastic autoimmune disorders, and strong PD-L1 expression has been reported in thymic epithelial tumours. We aimed to assess the activity of pembrolizumab, a monoclonal antibody that targets PD-1, in patients with advanced thymic carcinoma. METHODS We completed a single-arm phase 2 study of pembrolizumab in patients with recurrent thymic carcinoma who had progressed after at least one line of chemotherapy. This was a single-centre study performed at Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA. Key inclusion criteria were an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0-2, no history of autoimmune disease or other malignancy requiring treatment or laboratory abnormality, and adequate organ function. Patients received 200 mg of pembrolizumab every 3 weeks for up to 2 years. The primary objective of the study was the proportion of patients who had achieved a response assessed with Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors version 1.1. Analysis was per protocol, in all eligible patients. The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02364076, and is closed to accrual; we report the final analysis. FINDINGS 41 patients were enrolled from March 12, 2015, to Dec 16, 2016, of whom 40 were eligible and evaluable and one was excluded because of elevated liver enzymes at screening. The median follow-up was 20 months (IQR 14-26). The proportion of patients who achieved a response was 22·5% (95% CI 10·8-38·5); one (3%) patient achieved a complete response, eight (20%) patients achieved partial responses, and 21 (53%) patients achieved stable disease. The most common grade 3 or 4 adverse events were increased aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase (five [13%] patients each). Six (15%) patients developed severe autoimmune toxicity, including two (5%) patients with myocarditis. There were 17 deaths at the time of analysis, but no deaths due to toxicity. INTERPRETATION Pembrolizumab is a promising treatment option in patients with thymic carcinoma. Because severe autoimmune disorders are more frequent in thymic carcinoma than in other tumour types, careful monitoring is essential. FUNDING Merck & Co.


Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics | 2003

Monitoring the stability of human vaccines.

William R. Fairweather; Robin Mogg; Philip S. Bennett; Jinglin Zhong; Cynthia Morrisey; Timothy L. Schofield

Postmarketing stability studies of vaccines that tend to be close to their clinical specification at the end of the expiration dating period may require enhanced annual monitoring. In addition, an early assessment of product stability prior to completion of each individual study is desired. However, predictive measures of individual lots may produce early indication of failure. In many cases, these prove to be false alarms. For such products, continued product quality after marketing should, therefore, depend less on evaluating individual observations or individual lot projections, and more on assuring that the underlying stability profile of the product as a whole has not changed. We propose a monitoring procedure and an index of the average quality of vaccine lots currently on the market. We explore the statistical properties of the index for several experimental designs for sampling of marketed lots, and we describe an optimality property of the index.

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