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Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B

The most relevant endpoint in therapeutic HIV vaccination is the assessment of time to viral rebound or duration of sustained control of low-level viremia upon cART treatment cessation. Structured treatment interruptions (STI) are however not without risk to the patient and reliable predictors of vi...

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Autores principales: Rosás-Umbert, Miriam, Mothe, Beatriz, Noguera-Julian, Marc, Bellido, Rocío, Puertas, Maria C., Carrillo, Jorge, Rodriguez, C., Perez-Alvarez, Núria, Cobarsí, Patricia, Gomez, Carmen E., Esteban, Mariano, Jímenez, Jose Luis, García, Felipe, Blanco, Julià, Martinez-Picado, Javier, Paredes, Roger, Brander, Christian
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5617163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28953921
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184929
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author Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
Mothe, Beatriz
Noguera-Julian, Marc
Bellido, Rocío
Puertas, Maria C.
Carrillo, Jorge
Rodriguez, C.
Perez-Alvarez, Núria
Cobarsí, Patricia
Gomez, Carmen E.
Esteban, Mariano
Jímenez, Jose Luis
García, Felipe
Blanco, Julià
Martinez-Picado, Javier
Paredes, Roger
Brander, Christian
author_facet Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
Mothe, Beatriz
Noguera-Julian, Marc
Bellido, Rocío
Puertas, Maria C.
Carrillo, Jorge
Rodriguez, C.
Perez-Alvarez, Núria
Cobarsí, Patricia
Gomez, Carmen E.
Esteban, Mariano
Jímenez, Jose Luis
García, Felipe
Blanco, Julià
Martinez-Picado, Javier
Paredes, Roger
Brander, Christian
author_sort Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
collection PubMed
description The most relevant endpoint in therapeutic HIV vaccination is the assessment of time to viral rebound or duration of sustained control of low-level viremia upon cART treatment cessation. Structured treatment interruptions (STI) are however not without risk to the patient and reliable predictors of viral rebound/control after therapeutic HIV-1 vaccination are urgently needed to ensure patient safety and guide therapeutic vaccine development. Here, we integrated immunological and virological parameters together with viral rebound dynamics after STI in a phase I therapeutic vaccine trial of a polyvalent MVA-B vaccine candidate to define predictors of viral control. Clinical parameters, proviral DNA, host HLA genetics and measures of humoral and cellular immunity were evaluated. A sieve effect analysis was conducted comparing pre-treatment viral sequences to breakthrough viruses after STI. Our results show that a reduced proviral HIV-1 DNA at study entry was independently associated with two virological parameters, delayed HIV-1 RNA rebound (p = 0.029) and lower peak viremia after treatment cessation (p = 0.019). Reduced peak viremia was also positively correlated with a decreased number of HLA class I allele associated polymorphisms in Gag sequences in the rebounding virus population (p = 0.012). Our findings suggest that proviral DNA levels and the number of HLA-associated Gag polymorphisms may have an impact on the clinical outcome of STI. Incorporation of these parameters in future therapeutic vaccine trials may guide refined immunogen design and help conduct safer STI approaches.
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spelling pubmed-56171632017-10-09 Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B Rosás-Umbert, Miriam Mothe, Beatriz Noguera-Julian, Marc Bellido, Rocío Puertas, Maria C. Carrillo, Jorge Rodriguez, C. Perez-Alvarez, Núria Cobarsí, Patricia Gomez, Carmen E. Esteban, Mariano Jímenez, Jose Luis García, Felipe Blanco, Julià Martinez-Picado, Javier Paredes, Roger Brander, Christian PLoS One Research Article The most relevant endpoint in therapeutic HIV vaccination is the assessment of time to viral rebound or duration of sustained control of low-level viremia upon cART treatment cessation. Structured treatment interruptions (STI) are however not without risk to the patient and reliable predictors of viral rebound/control after therapeutic HIV-1 vaccination are urgently needed to ensure patient safety and guide therapeutic vaccine development. Here, we integrated immunological and virological parameters together with viral rebound dynamics after STI in a phase I therapeutic vaccine trial of a polyvalent MVA-B vaccine candidate to define predictors of viral control. Clinical parameters, proviral DNA, host HLA genetics and measures of humoral and cellular immunity were evaluated. A sieve effect analysis was conducted comparing pre-treatment viral sequences to breakthrough viruses after STI. Our results show that a reduced proviral HIV-1 DNA at study entry was independently associated with two virological parameters, delayed HIV-1 RNA rebound (p = 0.029) and lower peak viremia after treatment cessation (p = 0.019). Reduced peak viremia was also positively correlated with a decreased number of HLA class I allele associated polymorphisms in Gag sequences in the rebounding virus population (p = 0.012). Our findings suggest that proviral DNA levels and the number of HLA-associated Gag polymorphisms may have an impact on the clinical outcome of STI. Incorporation of these parameters in future therapeutic vaccine trials may guide refined immunogen design and help conduct safer STI approaches. Public Library of Science 2017-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5617163/ /pubmed/28953921 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184929 Text en © 2017 Rosás-Umbert et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rosás-Umbert, Miriam
Mothe, Beatriz
Noguera-Julian, Marc
Bellido, Rocío
Puertas, Maria C.
Carrillo, Jorge
Rodriguez, C.
Perez-Alvarez, Núria
Cobarsí, Patricia
Gomez, Carmen E.
Esteban, Mariano
Jímenez, Jose Luis
García, Felipe
Blanco, Julià
Martinez-Picado, Javier
Paredes, Roger
Brander, Christian
Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B
title Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B
title_full Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B
title_fullStr Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B
title_full_unstemmed Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B
title_short Virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in HIV-1-infected subjects vaccinated with MVA-B
title_sort virological and immunological outcome of treatment interruption in hiv-1-infected subjects vaccinated with mva-b
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5617163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28953921
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184929
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