The purpose of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of a VRC DNA/rAd5 vaccine regimen in healthy, circumcised men and male-to-female (MTF) transgender persons who have sex with men. NOTES: As of April 2013, all vaccinations in this study have been stopped. As of June 2017, this study has been closed.
In 2007, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS estimated that 33.2 million people were living with HIV/AIDS globally. The U.S. HIV prevalence data reported in October 2008 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 1.1 million adults and adolescents were living with diagnosed or undiagnosed HIV infection in the United States at the end of 2006. Nearly half of all U.S. HIV infections (48.1%) were found in men who have sex with men (MSM). Given the difficulty of maintaining behaviors that prevent HIV transmission over a lifetime and the occurrence of nonconsensual sex, the need for a safe and effective vaccine is clear. The primary purpose of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of a VRC DNA/rAd5 vaccine regimen in healthy, at-risk, circumcised men and MTF transgender persons who have sex with men. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two arms. Participants in Arm 1 will receive a recombinant DNA plasmid vaccine injection at study entry and on Days 28 and 56, followed by a recombinant adenoviral serotype vector vaccine injection on Day 168. Participants in Arm 2 will receive placebo injections at study entry and on Days 28, 56, and 168. Participants who do not become HIV infected will be actively followed for a minimum of 24 months and will continue to be followed by the study for long-term safety surveillance for a total of 5 years following enrollment. Participants will be contacted annually during the period of long-term safety surveillance. Participants who are found to be HIV infected prior to receiving their first injection or who receive their first injection but were HIV infected prior to study start will be followed on a modified schedule. Participants who become HIV infected will be followed for 6 months post-diagnosis. At most study visits, participants will undergo a physical exam and blood draw. NOTES: As of April 2013, all vaccinations in this study have been stopped. Participants have been notified of whether they received the study vaccines or placebo. Participants diagnosed with HIV infection will attend study visits for 6 months for health monitoring. Participants who are not diagnosed with HIV infection will attend planned study visits for 24 months and will be followed by the study clinic at least annually for a total of 5 years following study enrollment. As of June 2017, this study has been closed. Therefore, to avoid further burden on study participants, further participant follow-up for the study is suspended.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
2,504
4-mg injection administered as 1 mL intramuscularly (IM) via Biojector® in either deltoid
1 x 10\^10 particle units (PU) administered as 1mL IM by needle and syringe in either deltoid
1 mL IM via Biojector® in either deltoid
1 mL administered IM by needle and syringe in either deltoid
Alabama CRS
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
The AIDS Research Alliance of America CRS
Los Angeles, California, United States
UCLA CARE Center CRS
Los Angeles, California, United States
Bridge HIV CRS
San Francisco, California, United States
University of Colorado Hospital CRS
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Orlando Immunology Center CRS
Orlando, Florida, United States
The Hope Clinic of the Emory Vaccine Center CRS
Decatur, Georgia, United States
UIC Project WISH CRS
Chicago, Illinois, United States
VRC Clinical Trials Core CRS
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Brigham and Women's Hospital Vaccine CRS (BWH VCRS)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
...and 12 more locations
Participant Dropout Through Month 48
For participants remaining uninfected, dropout is assessed only for primary follow-up, i.e. clinic visits. Protocol versions 4 and earlier included 24 months of primary follow-up, and versions 5 and later included 48 months. Participants may terminate early after completing primary follow-up, and participants who were found to be HIV-1 infected are analyzed as non-dropouts, so the number of dropouts and number of early terminations need not match.
Time frame: Enrollment through Month 48 visit
Participant Dropout Prior to Unblinding
The trial was unblinded on April 23, 2013, and the protocol was in version 4 at the time. For participants remaining uninfected, dropout is assessed only for primary follow-up, i.e. clinic visits. Protocol versions 4 and earlier included 24 months of primary follow-up, and versions 5 and later included 48 months. Participants may terminate early after completing primary follow-up, and participants who were found to be HIV-1 infected are analyzed as non-dropouts, so the number of dropouts and number of early terminations need not match.
Time frame: Enrollment until the date of dropout, through April 22, 2013 (up to Month 24 visit)
Participant Dropout After Unblinding
The trial was unblinded on April 23, 2013, and the protocol was in version 4 at the time. For participants remaining uninfected, dropout is assessed only for primary follow-up, i.e. clinic visits. Protocol versions 4 and earlier included 24 months of primary follow-up, and versions 5 and later included 48 months. Participants may terminate early after completing primary follow-up, and participants who were found to be HIV-1 infected are analyzed as non-dropouts, so the number of dropouts and number of early terminations need not match.
Time frame: April 23, 2013 through trial closure (up to Month 48 visit)
HIV-1 Infections Diagnosed After Day 0 Including All Available Follow-up Through the Maximum Month 48 Visit
For time-to-event analysis, an event is defined as HIV-1 infection and participants are censored if they dropped out early or completed the trial. HIV-1 diagnosis date is defined as the date of the earliest specimen collection yielding a positive HIV test. Participants remaining uninfected were censored at the latest specimen collection with a negative HIV-1 test.
Time frame: Enrollment through Month 48 visit
HIV-1 Infections Diagnosed After Day 0 Through the Month 24 Visit
For time-to-event analysis, an event is defined as HIV-1 infection and participants remaining uninfected through the month 24 visit were censored. HIV-1 diagnosis date is defined as the date of the earliest specimen collection at or prior to month 24 which yielded a positive HIV test. Participants remaining uninfected through the month 24 visit were censored at the latest specimen collection with a negative HIV-1 test at or prior to the month 24 visit.
Time frame: Enrollment through Month 24 visit
Number of Participants Experiencing Local Reactogenicity: Pain and/or Tenderness
For each sign or symptom, we define the maximum observed grade for each participant over all vaccinations and post-vaccination assessments. Local and systemic signs and symptoms are assessed and graded based on The Division of AIDS Table for Grading the Severity of Adult and Pediatric Adverse Events (DAIDS AE Grading Table), Version 1.0, December, 2004 (Clarification dated August 2009). Local reactogenicity parameters are pain, tenderness, erythema, and induration. We present the maximum grade for pain and/or tenderness, and erythema and/or induration.
Time frame: Through 3 days post each study vaccination, and to resolution for events present at the third day post vaccination
Number of Participants Experiencing Local Reactogenicity: Erythema and/or Induration
For each sign or symptom, we define the maximum observed grade for each participant over all vaccinations and post-vaccination assessments. Local and systemic signs and symptoms are assessed and graded based on The Division of AIDS Table for Grading the Severity of Adult and Pediatric Adverse Events (DAIDS AE Grading Table), Version 1.0, December, 2004 (Clarification dated August 2009). Local reactogenicity parameters are pain, tenderness, erythema, and induration. We present the maximum grade for pain and/or tenderness, and erythema and/or induration.
Time frame: Through 3 days post each study vaccination, and to resolution for events present at the third day post vaccination
Number of Participants Experiencing Systemic Reactogenicity
For each sign or symptom, we define the maximum observed grade for each participant over all vaccinations and post-vaccination assessments. Local and systemic signs and symptoms are assessed and graded based on The Division of AIDS Table for Grading the Severity of Adult and Pediatric Adverse Events (DAIDS AE Grading Table), Version 1.0, December, 2004 (Clarification dated August 2009). Systemic reactogenicity parameters are malaise/fatigue, myalgia, headache, nausea, vomiting, chills, and arthralgia. We present the maximum grade calculated over these parameters.
Time frame: Through 3 days post each study vaccination, and to resolution for events present at the third day post vaccination
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