Completed

Safety of and Immune Response to an HIV-1 DNA Vaccine (VRC HIVDNA009-00-VP) in HIV Uninfected Adults

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What is being tested

VRC-HIVDNA009-00-VP

Biological
Who is being recruted

HIV Infections

From 18 to 50 Years
How is the trial designed

Prevention Study

Phase 1
Interventional
Study Start: December 2003

Summary

Principal SponsorNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Last updated: October 14, 2021
Sourced from a government-validated database.Claim as a partner
Study start date: December 1, 2003Actual date on which the first participant was enrolled.

The purpose of this study is to test the safety of and immune response to an HIV-1 vaccine, VRC-HIVDNA009-00-VP, in HIV uninfected participants. Two different doses of the vaccine will be tested. The worldwide HIV epidemic highlights the importance of developing an affordable, globally successful vaccine for HIV prevention. The VRC-HIVDNA009-00-VP vaccine used in this study was developed to incorporate HIV genes from multiple virus clades, representing the viral subtypes responsible for about 90% of new HIV infections in the world. The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and immunogenicity of VRC-HIVDNA009-00-VP in healthy, HIV uninfected individuals. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups and will be followed for one year. Study injections will be given by needle-free intramuscular injection at the start of study and at Months 1 and 2. Group 1 will receive 3 injections of the study vaccine; Group 2 will receive 2 injections of the study vaccine (at start and Month 2) and injection of placebo (at Month 1); Group 3 will receive 3 injections of placebo. After a screening visit, study visits will occur at enrollment (initial injection) followed by 5 visits every 14 days for the first 2.5 months, with three additional visits at Months 6, 9, and 12. All participants will undergo physical exams, blood and urine tests to assess measures of health, and blood tests to assess HIV infection and immune response to the injections.

Official TitleA Phase IB Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Immunogenicity of a Multiclade HIV-1 DNA Plasmid Vaccine, VRC-HIVDNA009-00-VP, Administered at 2 Different Dosing Schedules, in HIV-1-Uninfected Adult Participants 
Principal SponsorNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Last updated: October 14, 2021
Sourced from a government-validated database.Claim as a partner

Protocol

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
Design Details
180 patients to be enrolledTotal number of participants that the clinical trial aims to recruit.
Prevention Study
Prevention studies aim to stop a disease from developing. They often involve people at risk and test things like vaccines, lifestyle changes, or preventive medications.

How participants are assigned to different groups/arms
In this clinical study, participants are placed into groups randomly, like flipping a coin. This ensures that the study is fair and unbiased, making the results more reliable. By assigning participants by chance, researchers can better compare treatments without external influences.

Other Ways to Assign Participants
Non-randomized allocation
: Participants are assigned based on specific factors, such as their medical condition or a doctor's decision.

None (Single-arm trial)
: If the study has only one group, all participants receive the same treatment, and no allocation is needed.

How treatments are given to participants
Participants receive different combinations of treatments to see how they work together. This approach helps researchers determine whether a combination of treatments is more effective than a single treatment alone.

Other Ways to Assign Treatments
Single-group assignment
: Everyone gets the same treatment.

Parallel assignment
: Participants are split into separate groups, each receiving a different treatment.

Cross-over assignment
: Participants switch between treatments during the study.

Sequential assignment
: Participants receive treatments one after another in a specific order, possibly based on individual responses.

Other assignment
: Treatment assignment does not follow a standard or predefined design.

How the interventions assigned to participants is kept confidential
Neither participants nor researchers know who is receiving which treatment. This is the most rigorous way to reduce bias, ensuring that expectations do not influence the results.

Other Ways to Mask Information
Open-label
: Everyone knows which treatment is being given.

Single-blind
: Participants do not know which treatment they are receiving, but researchers do.

Triple-blind
: Participants, researchers, and outcome assessors do not know which treatment is given.

Quadruple-blind
: Participants, researchers, outcome assessors, and care providers all do not know which treatment is given.

Eligibility

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria: person's general health condition or prior treatments.
Conditions
Criteria
Any sexBiological sex of participants that are eligible to enroll.
From 18 to 50 YearsRange of ages for which participants are eligible to join.
Healthy volunteers allowedIf individuals who are healthy and do not have the condition being studied can participate.
Conditions
Pathology
HIV Infections
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria * Understanding of vaccination procedure * Willing to receive HIV test results and provide informed consent * Good general health * HIV negative * Hepatitis B surface antigen negative * Anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody negative, or negative for HCV PCR if the anti-HCV is positive * Not pregnant and agrees to use acceptable forms of contraception Exclusion Criteria * HIV vaccines or placebo in a prior HIV vaccine trial * Immunosuppressive medications within 168 days prior to study * Blood products within 120 days prior to study * Immunoglobulin within 60 days prior to study * Live attenuated vaccines within 30 days prior to study * Investigational research agents within 30 days prior to study * Medically indicated subunit or killed vaccines within 14 days prior to study * Current anti-tuberculosis prophylaxis or therapy * Anaphylaxis or other serious adverse reactions to vaccines; a person who had an adverse reaction to pertussis vaccine as a child is not excluded * Autoimmune disease or immunodeficiency * Active syphilis infection * Unstable asthma (e.g., use of oral, orally inhaled, or intravenous corticosteroids, emergent care, urgent care, hospitalization or intubation during the past 2 years) * Diabetes mellitus; a participant with past gestational diabetes is not excluded * Thyroid disease, including removal of thyroid and diagnoses requiring medication * Serious angioedema * Hypertension * Diagnosis of bleeding disorder * Malignancy, except those with a surgical excision and subsequent observation period that in the investigator's estimate has a reasonable assurance of sustained cure and/or is unlikely to recur during the period of the study * Seizure disorder requiring medication within the last 3 years * Absence of the spleen * Mental illness that would interfere with compliance with the protocol * Pregnant or breastfeeding * Two or more elevated liver function tests



Study Centers

These are the hospitals, clinics, or research facilities where the trial is being conducted. You can find the location closest to you and its status.
This study has 14 locations
Suspended
Alabama Vaccine CRSBirmingham, United StatesSee the location
Suspended
San Francisco Vaccine and Prevention CRSSan Francisco, United States
Suspended
Project Brave HIV Vaccine CRSBaltimore, United States
Suspended
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health,Ctr for Immunization Research,Project SAVE-BaltimoreBaltimore, United States

Completed14 Study Centers