Therapeutic vaccination expands and improves the function of the HIV-specific memory T-cell repertoire.

Journal: The Journal Of Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Background: The licensing of herpes zoster vaccine has demonstrated that therapeutic vaccination can help control chronic viral infection. Unfortunately, human trials of immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine have shown only marginal efficacy.

Methods: In this double-blind study, 17 HIV-infected individuals with viral loads of <50 copies/mL and CD4(+) T-cell counts of >350 cells/µL were randomly assigned to the vaccine or placebo arm. Vaccine recipients received 3 intramuscular injections of HIV DNA (4 mg) coding for clade B Gag, Pol, and Nef and clade A, B, and C Env, followed by a replication-deficient adenovirus type 5 boost (10(10) particle units) encoding all DNA vaccine antigens except Nef. Humoral, total T-cell, and CD8(+) cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses were studied before and after vaccination. Single-copy viral loads and frequencies of latently infected CD4(+) T cells were determined.

Results: Vaccination was safe and well tolerated. Significantly stronger HIV-specific T-cell responses against Gag, Pol, and Env, with increased polyfunctionality and a broadened epitope-specific CTL repertoire, were observed after vaccination. No changes in single-copy viral load or the frequency of latent infection were observed.

Conclusions: Vaccination of individuals with existing HIV-specific immunity improved the magnitude, breadth, and polyfunctionality of HIV-specific memory T-cell responses but did not impact markers of viral control. Background: NCT00270465.

Authors
Joseph Casazza, Kathryn Bowman, Selorm Adzaku, Emily Smith, Mary Enama, Robert Bailer, David Price, Emma Gostick, Ingelise Gordon, David Ambrozak, Martha Nason, Mario Roederer, Charla Andrews, Frank Maldarelli, Ann Wiegand, Mary Kearney, Deborah Persaud, Carrie Ziemniak, Raphael Gottardo, Julie Ledgerwood, Barney Graham, Richard Koup
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS