PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Therapeutic DNA vaccination of vertically HIV-infected children: report of the first pediatric randomised trial (PEDVAC).

  • Paolo Palma,
  • Maria Luisa Romiti,
  • Carla Montesano,
  • Veronica Santilli,
  • Nadia Mora,
  • Angela Aquilani,
  • Stefania Dispinseri,
  • Hyppolite K Tchidjou,
  • Marco Montano,
  • Lars E Eriksson,
  • Stefania Baldassari,
  • Stefania Bernardi,
  • Gabriella Scarlatti,
  • Britta Wahren,
  • Paolo Rossi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079957
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. e79957

Abstract

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SubjectsTwenty vertically HIV-infected children, 6-16 years of age, with stable viral load control and CD4+ values above 400 cells/mm(3).InterventionTen subjects continued their ongoing antiretroviral treatment (ART, Group A) and 10 were immunized with a HIV-DNA vaccine in addition to their previous therapy (ART and vaccine, Group B). The genetic vaccine represented HIV-1 subtypes A, B and C, encoded Env, Rev, Gag and RT and had no additional adjuvant. Immunizations took place at weeks 0, 4 and 12, with a boosting dose at week 36. Monitoring was performed until week 60 and extended to week 96.ResultsSafety data showed good tolerance of the vaccine. Adherence to ART remained high and persistent during the study and did not differ significantly between controls and vaccinees. Neither group experienced either virological failure or a decline of CD4+ counts from baseline. Higher HIV-specific cellular immune responses were noted transiently to Gag but not to other components of the vaccine. Lymphoproliferative responses to a virion antigen HIV-1 MN were higher in the vaccinees than in the controls (p = 0.047), whereas differences in reactivity to clade-specific Gag p24, RT or Env did not reach significance. Compared to baseline, the percentage of HIV-specific CD8+ lymphocytes releasing perforin in the Group B was higher after the vaccination schedule had been completed (p = 0.031). No increased CD8+ perforin levels were observed in control Group A.ConclusionsThe present study demonstrates the feasibility, safety and moderate immunogenicity of genetic vaccination in vertically HIV-infected children, paving the way for amplified immunotherapeutic approaches in the pediatric population.Trial registrationclinicaltrialsregister.eu _2007-002359-18IT.