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Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial

INTRODUCTION: Intramuscular electroporation (IM/EP) is a vaccine delivery technique that improves the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines. We evaluated the acceptability and tolerability of electroporation among healthy African study participants. METHODS: Forty-five participants were administered a DNA...

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Autores principales: Mpendo, Juliet, Mutua, Gaudensia, Nanvubya, Annet, Anzala, Omu, Nyombayire, Julien, Karita, Etienne, Dally, Len, Hannaman, Drew, Price, Matt, Fast, Patricia E., Priddy, Frances, Gelderblom, Huub C., Hills, Nancy K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7259687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32469893
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233151
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author Mpendo, Juliet
Mutua, Gaudensia
Nanvubya, Annet
Anzala, Omu
Nyombayire, Julien
Karita, Etienne
Dally, Len
Hannaman, Drew
Price, Matt
Fast, Patricia E.
Priddy, Frances
Gelderblom, Huub C.
Hills, Nancy K.
author_facet Mpendo, Juliet
Mutua, Gaudensia
Nanvubya, Annet
Anzala, Omu
Nyombayire, Julien
Karita, Etienne
Dally, Len
Hannaman, Drew
Price, Matt
Fast, Patricia E.
Priddy, Frances
Gelderblom, Huub C.
Hills, Nancy K.
author_sort Mpendo, Juliet
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Intramuscular electroporation (IM/EP) is a vaccine delivery technique that improves the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines. We evaluated the acceptability and tolerability of electroporation among healthy African study participants. METHODS: Forty-five participants were administered a DNA vaccine (HIV-MAG) or placebo by electroporation at three visits occurring at four week-intervals. At the end of each visit, participants were asked to rate pain at four times: (1) when the device was placed on the skin and vaccine injected, before the electrical stimulation, (2) at the time of electrical stimulation and muscle contraction, and (3) at 10 minutes and (4) 30 minutes after the procedure was completed. For analyses, pain level was dichotomized as either “acceptable” (none/slight/uncomfortable) or “too much” (Intense, severe, and very severe) and examined over time using repeated measures models. Optional brief comments made by participants were summarized anecdotally. RESULTS: All 45 participants completed all three vaccination visits; none withdrew from the study due to the electroporation procedure. Most (76%) reported pain levels as acceptable at every time point across all vaccination visits. The majority of “unacceptable” pain was reported at the time of electrical stimulation. The majority of the participants (97%) commented that they preferred electroporation to standard injection. CONCLUSION: Repeated intramuscular electroporation for vaccine delivery was found to be acceptable and feasible among healthy African HIV vaccine trial participants. The majority of participants reported an acceptable pain level at all vaccination time points. Further investigation may be warranted into the value of EP to improve immunization outcomes. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01496989
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spelling pubmed-72596872020-06-08 Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial Mpendo, Juliet Mutua, Gaudensia Nanvubya, Annet Anzala, Omu Nyombayire, Julien Karita, Etienne Dally, Len Hannaman, Drew Price, Matt Fast, Patricia E. Priddy, Frances Gelderblom, Huub C. Hills, Nancy K. PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Intramuscular electroporation (IM/EP) is a vaccine delivery technique that improves the immunogenicity of DNA vaccines. We evaluated the acceptability and tolerability of electroporation among healthy African study participants. METHODS: Forty-five participants were administered a DNA vaccine (HIV-MAG) or placebo by electroporation at three visits occurring at four week-intervals. At the end of each visit, participants were asked to rate pain at four times: (1) when the device was placed on the skin and vaccine injected, before the electrical stimulation, (2) at the time of electrical stimulation and muscle contraction, and (3) at 10 minutes and (4) 30 minutes after the procedure was completed. For analyses, pain level was dichotomized as either “acceptable” (none/slight/uncomfortable) or “too much” (Intense, severe, and very severe) and examined over time using repeated measures models. Optional brief comments made by participants were summarized anecdotally. RESULTS: All 45 participants completed all three vaccination visits; none withdrew from the study due to the electroporation procedure. Most (76%) reported pain levels as acceptable at every time point across all vaccination visits. The majority of “unacceptable” pain was reported at the time of electrical stimulation. The majority of the participants (97%) commented that they preferred electroporation to standard injection. CONCLUSION: Repeated intramuscular electroporation for vaccine delivery was found to be acceptable and feasible among healthy African HIV vaccine trial participants. The majority of participants reported an acceptable pain level at all vaccination time points. Further investigation may be warranted into the value of EP to improve immunization outcomes. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01496989 Public Library of Science 2020-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7259687/ /pubmed/32469893 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233151 Text en © 2020 Mpendo 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
Mpendo, Juliet
Mutua, Gaudensia
Nanvubya, Annet
Anzala, Omu
Nyombayire, Julien
Karita, Etienne
Dally, Len
Hannaman, Drew
Price, Matt
Fast, Patricia E.
Priddy, Frances
Gelderblom, Huub C.
Hills, Nancy K.
Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
title Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
title_full Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
title_fullStr Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
title_short Acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of Multi-antigenic HIV (HIVMAG) DNA vaccine among healthy African participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
title_sort acceptability and tolerability of repeated intramuscular electroporation of multi-antigenic hiv (hivmag) dna vaccine among healthy african participants in a phase 1 randomized controlled trial
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7259687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32469893
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233151
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