Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00536627

Efficacy and Tolerance of Naked DNA Vaccine in Patients With Chronic B Hepatitis

Randomised, Opened, Multicentre Phase I/II Trial in Patients With Chronic Hepatitis B With HBV VL < 12 IU/ml and Under Treatment With NRTI, Which Evaluated Efficacy and Tolerance of Vaccination With Naked DNA on Viral Replication After Analogs' Treatment Interruption. ANRS HB02 VAC-ADN

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
70 (actual)
Sponsor
French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine if DNA vaccination of chronic HBV patients under treatment with NRTI can restore T-cell responsiveness and delay virologic reactivation after treatment discontinuation.

Detailed description

Despite the availability of effective vaccines against hepatitis B, over 370 million people worldwide remain persistently infected with HBV. Persistent infection is associated with chronic liver disease that can lead to the developement of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in two-third of persons. Treatment of chronic hepatitis B relies on the use of analogs such as lamivudine, adefovir, entecavir or immunostimulators such as interferons. Although analogs are efficient, genotypic resistance occurs after one year of treatment and the rate of virologic relapse is high after treatment discontinuation. HBV is a non cytopathic virus and liver damage is caused by immune response against infected hepatocytes and to a non specific inflammatory response. Immune response contributes to the virus clearance. In acute hepatitis B infection, T cell response is polyclonal, specific and vigorous, whereas in patients with chronic infection, responses remain weak, less specific and hardly detectable in peripheral blood. T cell responses could be induced or restored by antigenic stimulation such as vaccination. In a previous phase I clinical trial, we showed that DNA vaccination with plasmid pCMVS2.S is safe and can specifically, but transiently activate T-cell responses in chronic HBV-carriers not responding to current antiviral therapies. Analogs such as lamivudine and adefovir were shown to enhance T cell responses concomitantly with viral load decrease. In this phase I/II clinical trial, we would like to determine if DNA vaccination of chronic HBV patients under treatment with NRTI can restore T-cell responsiveness and delay virologic reactivation after treatment discontinuation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BIOLOGICALDNA vaccine pCMVS2.SPatients will receive injections of 1 ml of vaccine (1 mg/ml) at weeks 0, 8, 16, 40 and 44

Timeline

Start date
2008-01-01
Primary completion
2010-11-01
Completion
2010-11-01
First posted
2007-09-28
Last updated
2026-04-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00536627. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.