Vaccination with heterologous HIV-1 envelope sequences and heterologous adenovirus vectors increases T-cell responses to conserved regions: HVTN 083

SR Walsh, Z Moodie, AJ Fiore-Gartland… - The Journal of …, 2016 - academic.oup.com
SR Walsh, Z Moodie, AJ Fiore-Gartland, C Morgan, MB Wilck, SM Hammer, SP Buchbinder…
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2016academic.oup.com
Background. Increasing the breadth of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
vaccine-elicited immune responses or targeting conserved regions may improve coverage
of circulating strains. HIV Vaccine Trials Network 083 tested whether cellular immune
responses with these features are induced by prime-boost strategies, using heterologous
vectors, heterologous inserts, or a combination of both. Methods. A total of 180 participants
were randomly assigned to receive combinations of adenovirus vectors (Ad5 or Ad35) and …
Abstract
Background.  Increasing the breadth of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine-elicited immune responses or targeting conserved regions may improve coverage of circulating strains. HIV Vaccine Trials Network 083 tested whether cellular immune responses with these features are induced by prime-boost strategies, using heterologous vectors, heterologous inserts, or a combination of both.
Methods.  A total of 180 participants were randomly assigned to receive combinations of adenovirus vectors (Ad5 or Ad35) and HIV-1 envelope (Env) gene inserts (clade A or B) in a prime-boost regimen.
Results.  T-cell responses to heterologous and homologous insert regimens targeted a similar number of epitopes (ratio of means, 1.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], .6–1.6; P = .91), but heterologous insert regimens induced significantly more epitopes that were shared between EnvA and EnvB than homologous insert regimens (ratio of means, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.2–5.7; P = .01). Participants in the heterologous versus homologous insert groups had T-cell responses that targeted epitopes with greater evolutionary conservation (mean entropy [±SD], 0.32 ± 0.1 bits; P = .003), and epitopes recognized by responders provided higher coverage (49%; P = .035). Heterologous vector regimens had higher numbers of total, EnvA, and EnvB epitopes than homologous vector regimens (P = .02, .044, and .045, respectively).
Conclusions.  These data demonstrate that vaccination with heterologous insert prime boosting increased T-cell responses to shared epitopes, while heterologous vector prime boosting increased the number of T-cell epitopes recognized.
Clinical Trials Registration.  NCT01095224.
Oxford University Press