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Clinical Trial: Safety of and Immune Response to a DNA HIV Vaccine Followed By an Adenoviral Vector HIV Vaccine in Healthy Adults
This study is not yet open for patient recruitment.
Verified by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) July 2005
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Purpose
| Condition | Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| HIV Infections | Vaccine: VRC-HIVDNA016-00-VP Vaccine: VRC-HIVADV014-00-VP | Phase II |
MedlinePlus related topics: AIDS
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Prevention, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment, Safety Study
Official Title: A Phase II Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Immunogenicity of a Multiclade HIV-1 DNA Plasmid Vaccine, VRC-HIVDNA016-00-VP, Followed By a Multiclade Recombinant Adenoviral Vector HIV-1 Vaccine Boost, VRC-HIVADV014-00-VP, in HIV-1 Uninfected Adult Participants
Expected Total Enrollment: 480
The worldwide HIV/AIDS epidemic may only be controlled through development of a safe and effective vaccine that will prevent HIV infection. DNA vaccines are inexpensive to construct, readily produced in large quantities, and stable for long periods of time. This study will evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of an experimental multiclade HIV vaccine, VRC-HIVDNA016-00-VP, followed by a similarly structured adenovirus-vectored vaccine boost, VRC-HIVADV014-00-VP, in HIV uninfected adults. The DNA plasmids in both the vaccines code for proteins from HIV subtypes A, B, and C, which together represent 90% of new HIV infections in the world. Participants in this study will be recruited in North America, South America, and Africa.
Each volunteer will participate in the study for one year. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups. Group 1 participants will receive the DNA HIV vaccine at study entry and at Months 1 and 2. At Month 6, Group 1 participants will receive an injection of the adenoviral vector HIV vaccine. Group 2 participants will receive placebo at study entry and Months 1, 2, and 6. There will be 12 study visits, which will occur at study entry and every 2 weeks thereafter until Day 70; at Month 6 and every 2 weeks thereafter until Day 210; and Months 9.5 and 12. A physical exam, adverse events reporting, HIV and pregnancy prevention counseling, and medication history will occur at each visit. Blood and urine collection will occur at selected visits.
Eligibility
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Inclusion Criteria:
- HIV uninfected
- Has access to a participating HIV Vaccine Trials Unit (HVTU) and willing to be followed for the duration of the study
- Willing to receive HIV test results
- Good general health
- Willing to use acceptable forms of contraception
Exclusion Criteria:
- HIV vaccines in prior HIV vaccine trial
- Immunosuppressive medications within 168 days prior to first study vaccine administration
- Blood products within 120 days prior to first study vaccine administration
- Immunoglobulin within 60 days prior to first study vaccine administration
- Live attenuated vaccines within 30 days prior to first study vaccine administration
- Investigational research agents within 30 days prior to first study vaccine administration
- Subunit or killed vaccines within 14 days prior to first study vaccine administration
- Current tuberculosis prophylaxis or therapy
- Clinically significant medical condition, abnormal physical exam findings, abnormal laboratory results, or past medical history that may affect current health
- Any medical, psychiatric, or social condition that would interfere with the study. More information about this criterion can be found in the protocol.
- Any job-related responsibility that would interfere with the study
- Serious adverse reaction to vaccines. A person who had an adverse reaction to pertussis vaccine as a child is not excluded.
- Autoimmune disease or immunodeficiency
- Active syphilis infection
- Unstable asthma
- Diabetes mellitus type 1 or 2
- Thyroid disease requiring treatment
- Serious angioedema within the past 3 years
- Uncontrolled hypertension
- Bleeding disorder
- Cancer. If a participant has had surgery to remove the cancer and, in the opinion of the investigator, the cancer is not likely to recur during the study period, the participant is not excluded.
- Seizure disorder
- Asplenia
- Mental illness that would interfere with compliance with the protocol
- Other conditions that, in the judgment of the investigator, would interfere with the study
- Pregnant or breastfeeding
Location and Contact Information
Michael Keefer, MD, Study Chair, University of Rochester
Gavin Churchyard, MBBCh, FCP, MMed, PhD, Study Chair, Aurum Health Research Limited
More Information
Click here for more information about HIV preventive vaccines
Publications
Esparza J, Osmanov S. HIV vaccines: a global perspective. Curr Mol Med. 2003 May;3(3):183-93. Review.
Gaschen B, Taylor J, Yusim K, Foley B, Gao F, Lang D, Novitsky V, Haynes B, Hahn BH, Bhattacharya T, Korber B. Diversity considerations in HIV-1 vaccine selection. Science. 2002 Jun 28;296(5577):2354-60. Review.
Moore JP, Parren PW, Burton DR. Genetic subtypes, humoral immunity, and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 vaccine development. J Virol. 2001 Jul;75(13):5721-9. Review. No abstract available.
Stratov I, DeRose R, Purcell DF, Kent SJ. Vaccines and vaccine strategies against HIV. Curr Drug Targets. 2004 Jan;5(1):71-88. Review.
Last Updated: August 1, 2005
Record first received: August 1, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00125970
Health Authority: United States: Food and Drug Administration
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-08-02

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