Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00402142

Dendritic Cell Vaccine in HIV-1 Infection

Phase II Study of Autologous Myeloid Dendritic Cells as a "Cellular Adjuvant" for a Therapeutic HIV-1 Vaccine in Early Stage HIV-1+ Patients (DCV-2).

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (actual)
Sponsor
Hospital Clinic of Barcelona · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

1. To study the efficacy of a therapeutic HIV vaccine consisting of autologous myeloid dendritic cells pulsed ex vivo with high doses of inactivated autologous HIV-1, in HIV-1 infected patients in a very early stages of the disease (CD4 \> 450 x 10 6 /L). 2. To analyze the HIV-1 humoral and cellular immune responses induced by this immune-based therapy.

Detailed description

Our group has reported recently the first human trial of 4 therapeutic immunizations at six-week intervals with autologous monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MD-DC) loaded with heat-inactivated autologous HIV in 12 HIV infected patients who had been receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) since early chronic infection. Autologous HIV was concentrated from plasma (1,500 ml) obtained by plasmapheresis after a 3-month HAART interruption (STOP1) performed 78 weeks before therapeutic immunizations, and HAART was discontinued again (STOP2) after therapeutic immunization. There was a decrease of set-point plasma viral load (PVL) \>= 0.5 log after 24 weeks off HAART in 4 out of 12 patients. In addition, we observed a significant lengthening in mean doubling time of PVL rebound (p= 0.01), and significant decreases in the area under the curve of PVL rebound (p= 0.02) and in the mean peak PVL (p= 0.004) during the 12 weeks after STOP 2 compared with STOP1. This virological response was associated with a weak but significant increase in HIV-1 specific CD4 lymphoproliferative response, and with changes in HIV-1 specific CD8+ T-cell responses in peripheral blood and in lymphoid CTL cells after immunization. In lymphoid tissue, we also observed a trend towards a better control of HIV-1 replication coupled with an increase of CD4+ and CTL cells. No significant virological or immunological changes occurred in controls. We show that a therapeutic vaccine with autologous MD-DC pulsed with heat inactivated autologous HIV-1 is feasible, safe and well tolerated and elicited weak and transient cellular immune responses against HIV, associated with a partial and transient control of HIV replication in some patients. we hypothesized that a DC vaccine pulsed with higher amount of autologous virus obtained by culture could be more effective than the vaccine we used.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALDendritic cell vaccine107 DC subcutaneous 3 doses every 2 weeks
BIOLOGICALnon pulsed dendritic cell untreated patients107 DC subcutaneous 3 doses every 2 weeks
BIOLOGICALpulsed dendritic cell vaccine107 DC subcutaneous 3 doses every 2 weeks
BIOLOGICALdendritic cell vaccine107 DC subcutaneous 3 doses every 2 weeks
BIOLOGICALnon pulsed dendritic cell vaccine107 DC subcutaneous 3 doses every 2 weeks

Timeline

Start date
2006-11-01
Primary completion
2011-12-01
Completion
2011-12-01
First posted
2006-11-22
Last updated
2014-02-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00402142. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.