Two Double‐Blinded, Randomized, Comparative Trials of 4 Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV‐1) Envelope Vaccines in HIV‐1–Infected Individuals across a Spectrum of Disease Severity: AIDS Clinical Trials Groups 209 and 214

Robert T. Schooley(University of Colorado Health), Cathie Spino(Harvard University), Daniel R. Kuritzkes(University of Colorado Health), Bruce D. Walker(Massachusetts General Hospital), Fred Valentine(New York University), Martin S. Hirsch(Massachusetts General Hospital), Elizabeth Cooney(Yale University), Gerald Friedland(New York University), Smriti K. Kundu(University of Washington), Thomas C. Merigan(Palo Alto University), M. Juliana McElrath(University of Washington), Ann C. Collier(University of Washington), Susan Plaeger(University of California, Los Angeles), Ronald T. Mitsuyasu(University of California, Los Angeles), JAMES O. KAHN(University of California, San Francisco), Patrick Haslett(New York University), Patricia Uherova(University of Colorado Health), Victor DeGruttola(Harvard University), Simon Chiu(Harvard University), Bin Zhang(University of Colorado Health), G. R. Jones(Harvard University), Dawn Bell(Social and Scientific Systems (United States)), Nzeera Ketter(National Institutes of Health), Thomas Twadell, David Chernoff, Mary E. Rosandich(University of Colorado Health)
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
November 1, 2000
Cited by 48Open Access
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Abstract

The potential role of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-specific immune responses in controlling viral replication in vivo has stimulated interest in enhancing virus-specific immunity by vaccinating infected individuals with HIV-1 or its components. These studies were undertaken to define patient populations most likely to respond to vaccination, with the induction of novel HIV-1-specific cellular immune responses, and to compare the safety and immunogenicity of several candidate recombinant HIV-1 envelope vaccines and adjuvants. New lymphoproliferative responses (LPRs) developed in <30% of vaccine recipients. LPRs were elicited primarily in study participants with a CD4 cell count >350 cells/mm(3) and were usually strain restricted. Responders tended to be more likely than nonresponders to have an undetectable level of HIV-1 RNA at baseline (P=.067). Induction of new cellular immune responses by HIV-1 envelope vaccines is a function of the immunologic stage of disease and baseline plasma HIV-1 RNA level and exhibits considerable vaccine strain specificity.


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