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  • A phase I trial of preventi...
    Keefer, Michael C; Frey, Sharon E; Elizaga, Marnie; Metch, Barbara; De Rosa, Stephen C; Barroso, Paulo F; Tomaras, Georgia; Cardinali, Massimo; Goepfert, Paul; Kalichman, Artur; Philippon, Valérie; McElrath, M. Juliana; Jin, Xia; Ferrari, Guido; Defawe, Olivier D; Mazzara, Gail P; Montefiori, David; Pensiero, Michael; Panicali, Dennis L; Corey, Lawrence

    Vaccine, 02/2011, Letnik: 29, Številka: 10
    Journal Article

    Abstract We evaluated replication-defective poxvirus vectors (modified vaccinia Ankara MVA and fowlpox FPV) in a homologous and heterologous vector prime-boost vaccination regimen containing matching HIV inserts (MVA-HIV and FPV-HIV) given at months 0, 1, 3, 5 and 7 in 150 healthy HIV-negative vaccinia-naïve participants. FPV-HIV alone was poorly immunogenic, while the high dose (109 pfu/2 ml) of MVA-HIV alone elicited maximal responses after two injections: CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses in 26/55 (47.3%) and 5/60 (8.3%) of participants, respectively, and IFN-γ ELISpot responses in 28/62 (45.2%). The infrequent CD8+ T-cell responses following MVA-HIV priming were boosted only by the heterologous (FPV-HIV) construct in 14/27 (51.9%) of participants post 4th vaccination. Alternatively, HIV envelope-specific binding antibodies were demonstrated in approximately two-thirds of recipients of the homologous boosting regimen, but in less than 20% of subjects after the heterologous vector boost. Thus, a heterologous poxvirus vector prime-boost regimen can induce HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell and CD4+ T-cell responses, which may be an important feature of an optimal regimen for preventive HIV vaccination.