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Development Of A Multicomponent HIV-1 Recombinant Adenoviral Vector Vaccine

$2,149,913ZIBFY2012AINIH

National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases

Investigators

Linked publications & trials

Abstract

This project is designed to prepare a GMP quality investigational HIV vaccine and complete the preclinical and laboratory studies needed for clinical studies of a multicomponent HIV-1 adenoviral vector vaccine. The hypothesis is that the vaccine will be safe for human administration and elicit immune responses to HIV-1. Subjects receive adenovector vaccine either as a single agent or as a boost after priming with plasmid DNA vaccines. The Vaccine Research Center (VRC), NIAID is developing a novel prime-boost HIV vaccine strategy directed at the three most globally prevalent HIV subtypes (clades). VRC's HIV prime-boost candidate is designed to elicit immune responses to HIV sequences from clades A, B and C which together cause about 90 percent of incident HIV infections around the world. In November 2004, the VRC Clinical Trials Core launched a Phase I clinical study (VRC 006) of a multiclade, multigene recombinant adenovector 5 vaccine at the NIH Clinical Center (Bethesda, MD) as the first step in developing the prime-boost regimen. This product has since been evaluated clinically as a single agent and as part of a DNA prime-adenovector boost regimen in several Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials in U.S. and international sites. Production of Phase II materials has been completed. Additional new serotype adeno vectors are in development for production.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →