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Session 93
Poster Abstracts Therapeutic Vaccination of Infected Patients Friday, 1:30 - 3:30 pm Hall A |
Background: We enrolled 40
HIV-infected subjects with CD4+ T-cell counts of > 350 cells/mL and plasma HIV RNA levels of < 50 copies/mL while receiving
Methods: Primary
vaccine immunogenicity was measured to individual
vaccine epitopes in an interferon (IFN)-g ELISpot assay using peripheral blood
mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained at baseline and at week 18, 2 weeks after the
last immunization. In a secondary analysis, we evaluated epitope-specific
IFN-g responses by ELISpot following in vitro stimulation of baseline vs week 24 PBMC with pooled epitope
peptides. A vaccine responder was defined prospectively as having ELISpot responses following vaccination to ≥ 2 epitope peptides that were ≥ 3 times those of
pre-vaccine values.
Results: Baseline ELISpot analyses indicated that 9 of the 40 subjects
responded to 1 or more vaccine epitopes, and 9 of 21
peptides were recognized by at least 1 subject. Post-vaccination, 11 of 21
peptides were recognized by 11 subjects. Two subjects (0.5- and 1-mg dose
groups) met predetermined criteria for a vaccine response (2 of 32 [6.3%] of
subjects receiving vaccine) based on ELISpot, and an
additional 3 subjects developed vaccine responses to 1 vaccine epitope (5 of 32, 15.6%). Using the in vitro
stimulation assay, 9 of 32 (28.1%) vaccine recipients developed responses to 2
or more vaccine epitope peptides. Overall, the
frequency of vaccine recipients who developed a response to 1 or more vaccine epitopes using both types of assays was 17 of 32 (53.1%),
although this was not significantly greater than the placebo response rate (3
of 8, p = 0.69). Tetramer and
intracellular cytokine analyses are ongoing.
Conclusions: These results
suggest that priming of new T-cell responses without major in vivo
expansion of vaccine-specific IFN-g-producing T cells may have occurred in some subjects
receiving this multi-epitope
Keywords: DNA vaccine; immunogenicity; epitopes
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