학술논문

In Vivo Electroporation Enhances the Immunogenicity of an HIV-1 DNA Vaccine Candidate in Healthy Volunteers
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
PLoS ONE. May 16, 2011, Vol. 6 Issue 5, e19252
Subject
Antigens -- Analysis
AIDS vaccines -- Research -- Analysis
Biological response modifiers -- Analysis
B cells -- Analysis
Interferon gamma -- Research -- Analysis
HIV -- Research -- Analysis
DNA -- Analysis
Vaccination -- Analysis
Immune response -- Analysis
T cells -- Analysis
Health
Science and technology
Analysis
Research
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Background DNA-based vaccines have been safe but weakly immunogenic in humans to date. Methods and Findings We sought to determine the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of ADVAX, a multigenic HIV-1 DNA vaccine candidate, injected intramuscularly by in vivo electroporation (EP) in a Phase-1, double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial in healthy volunteers. Eight volunteers each received 0.2 mg, 1 mg, or 4 mg ADVAX or saline placebo via EP, or 4 mg ADVAX via standard intramuscular injection at weeks 0 and 8. A third vaccination was administered to eleven volunteers at week 36. EP was safe, well-tolerated and considered acceptable for a prophylactic vaccine. EP delivery of ADVAX increased the magnitude of HIV-1-specific cell mediated immunity by up to 70-fold over IM injection, as measured by gamma interferon ELISpot. The number of antigens to which the response was detected improved with EP and increasing dosage. Intracellular cytokine staining analysis of ELISpot responders revealed both CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses, with co-secretion of multiple cytokines. Conclusions This is the first demonstration in healthy volunteers that EP is safe, tolerable, and effective in improving the magnitude, breadth and durability of cellular immune responses to a DNA vaccine candidate. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00545987
Author(s): Sandhya Vasan 1 , 2 , * , Arlene Hurley 1 , 2 , Sarah J. Schlesinger 1 , 2 , Drew Hannaman 3 , David F. Gardiner 1 [...]