Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01627678

Immunotherapy With Vacc-C5 With Adjuvant GM-CSF or Alhydrogel in HIV-1-infected Subjects on ART

Immunotherapy of HIV-infected Patients An Open, Dose-escalating Assessment of Vacc-C5 With Either GM-CSF or Alhydrogel as Adjuvant in HIV-1-infected Subjects on Antiretroviral Therapy (ART)

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
36 (actual)
Sponsor
Bionor Immuno AS · Industry
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 55 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Background: Despite the introduction of highly effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimes, which control the HIV infection and results in increases in CD4 cell counts and an undetectable viral load, many patients suffer from increased morbidity. There is evidence that presence of antibodies against the C5 region of gp120 strongly correlates with slower disease progression, and that loss of antibody responses to this region are associated with progression. Investigational product: Vacc-C5 is a single heterodimeric peptide-based HIV therapeutic vaccine corresponding to the C5 region on gp120 and the external domain of gp41. The vaccine is intended to create a non-neutralizing antibody against C5 region. Study objectives: 1. To evaluate safety of the vaccination regimens 2. To evaluate C5-specific humoral immune responses (antibodies), T cell responses, T cell activation markers and other immune markers.

Detailed description

Background: Despite the introduction of highly effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimes, which control the HIV infection and results in increases in CD4 cell counts and an undetectable viral load, many patients suffer from increased morbidity. There is evidence that presence of antibodies against the C5 region of gp120 strongly correlates with slower disease progression, and that loss of antibody responses to this region are associated with progression. Investigational product: Vacc-C5 is a single heterodimeric peptide-based HIV therapeutic vaccine corresponding to the C5 region on gp120 and the external domain of gp41. The rationale behind the Vacc-C5 is the finding that long-term non-progressors (LTNP) subjects have more antibodies towards the C5 part of gp120 than HIV infected subjects with a more rapid disease progression. The primary objective of Vacc-C5 immunotherapy is to induce a humoral immune response. The vaccine is intended to create a non-neutralizing antibody against the C5 region and to thereby mimic a natural process in HIV-infected long-term non-progressors (LTNP) subjects. Use of adjuvant: Peptide vaccines are poorly immunogenic by themselves. To induce measurable levels of T helper cell type 1 (Th1) or type 2 (Th2) immune responses against these peptides, an adjuvant is often required. Two different adjuvants are to be used in this study: 1. GM-CSF which facilitates dendritic cell maturation and migration to the lymph nodes for antigen presentation. The regimen when using this adjuvant is intradermal administration. 2. Aluminum-containing adjuvants is well known. They have been administered to human beings and animals in millions of doses of vaccines. This type of vaccine is usually administered intramuscularly or subcutaneously. In this study intramuscular administration will be used. Primary objective: It is to evaluate the safety of Vacc-C5 at three different dose levels given intradermally with GM-CSF as adjuvant or given intramuscularly with Alhydrogel as adjuvant. Secondary objectives: 1. To evaluate C5-specific humoral immune responses (antibodies). 2. To evaluate the C5-specific T cell responses by ELISPOT and T cell proliferation. 3. To evaluate T cell activation markers (e.g. CD38, HLA-DR) and other immune markers. Study design: The study is an open, dose-escalating, single centre study in HIV-positive subjects on treatment (ART). Two different vaccine regimens will be tested: 1. Arm A: Vacc-C5 with GM-CSF as adjuvant administered intradermally. 2. Arm B: Vacc-C5 with Alhydrogel as adjuvant administered intramuscularly. Three dose levels of Vacc-C5 (100, 300 and 900 microgram will be tested for each of the two vaccination regimen. A dose escalation design (3+3) will be used, and if no dose limiting toxicity (DLT) is detected 18 subjects will be included in each arm. Subjects who have been HIV-positive and stable on ART for the last 6 months with CD4 cell counts ≥400x 10 6 /L and who meet the other inclusion and exclusion criteria will be eligible for the study. The duration of the study is 26 weeks plus a screening period of up to 12 weeks. During the Treatment Period, all subjects will remain on their ART and receive three immunizations; at Weeks 1, 2 and 4, with Vacc C5 including either GM-CSF or Alhydrogel as adjuvant. The study is sequential, meaning that the first three subjects in each arm receive the lowest dose (three subjects) 100 µg Vacc-C5. If no dose limiting toxicity has been detected after week 4 vaccination, three more subjects will be added and the next dose level will be started.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGVacc-C5/GM-CSFArm 1=Arm A: Vacc-C5 with GM-CSF as adjuvant administered intradermally.
DRUGVacc-C5/AlhydrogelArm 2=Arm B: Vacc-C5 with Alhydrogel as adjuvant administered intramuscularly.

Timeline

Start date
2012-09-01
Primary completion
2013-11-01
Completion
2013-11-01
First posted
2012-06-26
Last updated
2014-01-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Norway

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01627678. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.