Vaccine Response Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase I Study of Safety and Immunogenicity of Ad4-HIV Vaccine Vectors in Healthy Volunteers
Background:
- Vaccines create resistance to disease. This study tests experimental human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) vaccines that use an adenovirus as a transporter. Transporters may help vaccines
stimulate an immune response against HIV. This means the body works to fight infection.
Researchers want to see if different ways of giving the vaccines cause different immune
responses. They also want to see if the vaccines adenovirus is contagious. Adenoviruses cause
cold symptoms or mild eye infections.
Participants cannot get HIV from these vaccines. But they can get the adenovirus, so their
entire household and intimate contacts must participate.
Objective:
- To test the safety of experimental HIV vaccines.
Eligibility:
- Healthy adults 18-49 years old.
Design:
- Participants will be screened with medical history, physical exam, and blood and urine
tests.
- Participants will receive the vaccine 3 times over 6 months. Each time, they will have a
physical exam and blood and urine tests. Samples will be taken from their nose, rectum,
and cervix.
- Some participants will receive the vaccine by swallowing 11 capsules with water. Clinic
staff will observe them for 1 hour.
- Some participants will receive the vaccine swabbed in their throat. They will get dose 1
at the hospital and stay there for 1 week. They will have medical tests and nose swabs.
Doses 2 and 3 will not require a hospital stay.
- Participants will have 7 follow-up visits over 6 months, with a physical exam and blood
tests. Samples will be taken from their nose, throat, and rectum.
- Household and intimate contacts will have 4 clinic visits over 8 months, with a physical
exam and blood tests.
This is a Phase 1, single center, randomized, double-blind study designed to evaluate the
safety and immunogenicity of live, replication-competent recombinant Adenovirus type 4-HIV
vaccine regimens. The oral route will also contain a placebo control. The vaccine candidates
Ad4-mgag and Ad4-EnvC150 will be formulated as enteric-coated capsules to be delivered
orally, and as an aqueous formulation for intranasal administration. Determining the optimal
regimen and route will greatly accelerate investigations of these vectors as HIV vaccine
platforms.
Participants volunteering to receive the vaccine orally will be randomized to 1 of 4
treatment arms, and those volunteering to receive the vaccine via the intranasal route will
be randomized to 1 of 3 treatment arms. Participants will receive either 1 or both vaccines
or placebo, depending on group assignment. The study vaccines will be administered to
participants in 3 rounds of vaccination at 0, 2, and 6 months. All participants will receive
a booster vaccination with a bivalent HIV gp120 glycoprotein at 8 months. Intranasal vaccine
recipients with household contact(s) will receive the first vaccine in the NIH Special
Clinical Studies Unit or other appropriate unit and be followed on an inpatient basis to
allow for respiratory isolation. Intranasal vaccinees without household contact(s) may also
receive the vaccination as inpatients or may opt to receive the vaccine on an outpatient
basis if they agree to follow precautions for preventing the spread of adenovirus. Beginning
4 days after vaccination, inpatient participants will be tested daily for respiratory
shedding of Ad4 by nasopharyngeal wash. They will be discharged to home with close monitoring
on Day 7 or after 2 consecutive negative washes, whichever comes first; they may remain on
the unit longer if medically necessary. Prior to receiving the second dose of vaccine on an
outpatient basis, seroconversion to Ad4 will be confirmed in the intranasal vaccine
recipients. Those who have household contact(s) and have not seroconverted will continue to
receive subsequent doses as inpatients until they show seroconversion. Those who do not have
household contact(s) and those who have seroconverted may receive the remaining vaccinations
as inpatients or may opt to receive the doses on an outpatient basis if they agree to follow
precautions for preventing the spread of adenovirus. If they decline these options, they may
withdraw from the study and will be replaced. Oral capsule recipients will be vaccinated and
discharged to home.
In addition to clinical and laboratory monitoring of safety, the principal assessments will
be shedding of this viruses in rectal, cervicovaginal, throat, and nasal swabs, and
assessment of the antibody (mucosal and systemic) response to the HIV and to the Ad4 virus.
The candidate vaccines will also be administered to 2 groups of participants who have
previously received an unrelated HIV vaccine in another clinical study and/or are Ad4
seropositive. The aim for these groups is to explore the boost potential of the enteric
coated capsule and aqueous formulations of the Ad4-mgag and Ad4- EnvC150 vaccines when given
to subjects who have previously received another HIV vaccine and/or are Ad4 seropositive.
The adenovirus vaccines will not be retested for stability in 2018, and therefore will be out
of specifications on May 9th 2018. In an effort to capture as much information on
immunogenicity and adenoviral replication as possible, we will implemement the following
change beginning in 2018. The study will continue with enrollment into the remaining
treatment groups in a nonrandomized manner such that remaining participants receive both the
Ad4-mgag and Ad4-EnvC150 intranasally. These participants will receive 2 rounds of the
intranasal vaccine at Months 0 and 2 followed by a single dose of the booster vaccination at
Month 4.
All participants will be followed for a total of 6 months following the final dose of study
vaccine. Household and intimate contacts will also be enrolled and monitored for Adenovirus
and HIV antibodies for up to 8 months.
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