Safety and Effectiveness of Adding Either an HIV Vaccine, Interleukin-2, or Both to a Patient's Anti-HIV Drug Combination

NCT ID: NCT00006291

Last Updated: 2021-11-01

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE2

Total Enrollment

100 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Completion Date

2005-10-31

Brief Summary

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The purpose of this study is to see if adding an HIV vaccine (ALVAC-HIV vCP1452), IL-2 (interleukin-2, a protein found in the blood that helps boost the immune system), or both to anti-HIV-drug therapy is safe, tolerable, and effective in controlling viral load (level of HIV in the body). (This study has been changed to clarify drug name.) Anti-HIV drugs can help reduce a patient's viral load. However, HIV can still remain in CD4 cells (cells of the immune system that help fight infection). Combining an HIV vaccine, IL-2, or both with anti-HIV drugs may help reduce the number of HIV-infected cells.

Detailed Description

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The most important goal for designing future therapeutic interventions is to understand the nature of persistent HIV infection in patients successfully treated with potent antiretroviral therapy and to develop strategies to promote the clearance of these reservoirs or at least long-term suppression of these reservoirs. If latently infected cells are able to persist for a long period (despite effective suppression of de novo infection) primarily because immune clearance is not being adequately stimulated by viral antigen, then HIV-specific immunization is a reasonable strategy to enhance the clearance of these cells. Stimulating effective HIV-specific cellular immune responses at a time when plasma viremia is maximally suppressed also may contribute to the long-term containment of HIV replication on potent antiretroviral therapy. A second component to be evaluated in this trial is whether broad, cyclical activation of T cells with IL-2 will increase the activation of HIV proviral gene expression and thereby render target cells susceptible to immune-mediated clearance. This pathogenesis-based clinical trial will explore the potential for these novel treatment strategies (HIV-specific immunization and IL-2, alone and in combination) to complement the effects of potent antiretroviral therapy by promoting more effective immunologic control of HIV-1 replication.

This study is divided into 3 steps.

STEP I: Patients continue to receive their stable potent antiretroviral therapy and are randomized to 1 of 4 arms:

Arm A: Vaccine placebo \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: ALVAC\]; Arm B: Canarypox HIV-specific immunogen \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: ALVAC-HIV\] (vCP1452); Arm C: 8-week cycles of IL-2 plus vaccine placebo \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: ALVAC\]; Arm D: 8-week cycles of IL-2 plus canarypox HIV-specific immunogen \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: ALVAC-HIV\] (vCP1452).

Patients receive vaccine (or vaccine placebo) injections at Weeks 0, 8, 16, 24, and 48. IL-2 injections are synchronized with vaccine injections. IL-2 is given open-label while vCP1452 is double-blinded. Patients must be on Step I for a minimum of 51 weeks \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: prior to entry into Step II\].

STEP II: Patients stop study medications and interrupt potent antiretroviral therapy for \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: "6 to 16" has been replaced by the following text: a minimum of 12\] weeks. Patients whose viral load during Step II remains \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: at or\] below 5,000 copies/ml \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: and whose CD4 count is 200 cells/mm3 or more\] are encouraged to remain off antiretroviral medications and continue viral-load monitoring for up to an additional 10 weeks. These patients are followed \[AS PER AMENDMENT 08/23/01: "for up to 16 weeks" has been replaced by the following text: through Week 74\] on Step II and must register to Step III only if their viral load increases to 50,000 copies/ml or greater, their CD4 count decreases to below 200 cells/mm3, or if their primary care physician recommends resuming antiretrovirals.

STEP III: Patients resume their original potent antiretroviral therapy regimen for 6 to 10 weeks and are monitored for a minimum of 6 weeks. If patients do not achieve a viral load below 50 copies/ml during those 6 weeks, they continue to be monitored for up to an additional 4 weeks until this degree of suppression is achieved with the same potent antiretroviral therapy regimen or another appropriate regimen.

Conditions

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HIV Infections

Keywords

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Virus Replication T-Lymphocytes Lymphocyte Transformation AIDS Vaccines Anti-HIV Agents Viral Load Aldesleukin HIV Therapeutic Vaccine

Study Design

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Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Interventions

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ALVAC(2)120(B,MN)GNP (vCP1452)

Intervention Type BIOLOGICAL

Aldesleukin

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

Patients may be eligible to enter this study if they:

* Are HIV-positive.
* Have taken the same anti-HIV drugs for at least 6 months prior to study entry. A change of 1 drug to another similar drug is allowed in certain cases.
* Have a viral load of less than 50 copies/ml at screening and pre-entry. The measurements must be within 45 days of study entry.
* Have a CD4 cell count of at least 350 cells/mm3 within 45 days prior to study entry.
* Agree to use effective methods of birth control during the study and for 12 weeks after.

Exclusion Criteria

Patients may not be eligible for this study if they:

* Have or have had an AIDS-related illness (except Kaposi's sarcoma or Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia).
* Have had more than one potent antiretroviral regimen change due to virologic failure.
* Have a history of autoimmune disease with the exception of stable autoimmune thyroid disease.
* Have a history of allergy to eggs or other serious allergies.
* Have serious heart problems. Patients with high blood pressure controlled by blood pressure medication but no heart disease may be eligible for this study.
* Have cancer requiring chemotherapy.
* Have untreated thyroid disease. Patients who are on treatment and stable for at least 4 weeks before study entry are eligible.
* Have a serious central nervous system (CNS) disease or seizures, if these have been active within 1 year before study entry.
* Require certain heart medications for angina or arrhythmia.
* Are taking certain experimental anti-HIV drugs.
* Are taking certain drugs that may interfere with their anti-HIV-drug combination.
* Have taken drugs that might affect the immune system, within 4 weeks prior to study entry.
* Have taken IL-2 before.
* Have taken rifampin or rifabutin within 7 days before study entry if receiving indinavir.
* Have received therapy for an infection or any serious medical illness within 30 days before study entry.
* Have received immunizations within 30 days before study entry.
* Have received any HIV vaccine during the past year or at any time while on their present anti-HIV therapy.
* Work in close contact with canaries and are likely to have antibodies to the study vaccine prior to enrollment. (Patients with a pet canary may participate.)
* Abuse alcohol or drugs or have mental or learning problems.
* Are pregnant or breast-feeding.
* Have received abacavir or hydroxyurea within 8 weeks prior to study entry.
* Have a history of transplantation.
* (This study has been changed to reflect added criteria.)
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

NIH

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Michael Kilby

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Ronald Mitsuyasu

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Locations

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Alabama Therapeutics CRS

Birmingham, Alabama, United States

Site Status

USC CRS

Los Angeles, California, United States

Site Status

UCLA CARE Center CRS

Los Angeles, California, United States

Site Status

Stanford CRS

Palo Alto, California, United States

Site Status

Ucsf Aids Crs

San Francisco, California, United States

Site Status

Santa Clara Valley Med. Ctr.

San Jose, California, United States

Site Status

San Mateo County AIDS Program

San Mateo, California, United States

Site Status

Marin County Dept. of Health & Human Services, HIV/AIDS Program & Specialty Clinic

San Rafael, California, United States

Site Status

Harbor-UCLA Med. Ctr. CRS

Torrance, California, United States

Site Status

University of Colorado Hospital CRS

Aurora, Colorado, United States

Site Status

Univ. of Miami AIDS CRS

Miami, Florida, United States

Site Status

The Ponce de Leon Ctr. CRS

Atlanta, Georgia, United States

Site Status

Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa, Leahi Hosp.

Honolulu, Hawaii, United States

Site Status

Northwestern University CRS

Chicago, Illinois, United States

Site Status

Indiana Univ. School of Medicine, Infectious Disease Research Clinic

Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Site Status

Indiana Univ. School of Medicine, Wishard Memorial

Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Site Status

Methodist Hosp. of Indiana

Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Site Status

University of Minnesota, ACTU

Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States

Site Status

Beth Israel Med. Ctr., ACTU

New York, New York, United States

Site Status

NY Univ. HIV/AIDS CRS

New York, New York, United States

Site Status

Univ. of Rochester ACTG CRS

Rochester, New York, United States

Site Status

Unc Aids Crs

Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States

Site Status

Hosp. of the Univ. of Pennsylvania CRS

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Site Status

Vanderbilt Therapeutics CRS

Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Site Status

Univ. of Texas Medical Branch, ACTU

Galveston, Texas, United States

Site Status

Puerto Rico-AIDS CRS

San Juan, , Puerto Rico

Site Status

Countries

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United States Puerto Rico

Other Identifiers

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10070

Identifier Type: REGISTRY

Identifier Source: secondary_id

ACTG A5024

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: secondary_id

AACTG A5024

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: secondary_id

A5024

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id