Publication | Open Access
Correlation between Immunologic Responses to a Recombinant Glycoprotein 120 Vaccine and Incidence of HIV‐1 Infection in a Phase 3 HIV‐1 Preventive Vaccine Trial
348
Citations
34
References
2005
Year
VaccinationHiv-1 IncidenceCandidate VaccineHiv‐1 InfectionMedicineHuman RetrovirusImmunologyVaccine TrialImmunodominanceVaccine EfficacyChronic Viral InfectionHivImmunotherapyAntibody LevelsVaccine ResearchRecombinant Glycoprotein 120Phase 3
An objective of the first efficacy trial of a candidate vaccine containing recombinant human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 envelope glycoprotein 120 (rgp120) antigens was to assess correlations between antibody responses to rgp120 and the incidence of HIV-1 infection.Within the randomized trial (for vaccinees, n=3598; for placebo recipients, n=1805), binding and neutralizing antibody responses to rgp120 were quantitated. A case-cohort design was used to study correlations between antibody levels and HIV-1 incidence.Peak antibody levels were significantly inversely correlated with HIV-1 incidence. The relative risk (RR) of infection was 0.63 (95% confidence interval, 0.45-0.89) per log(10) higher neutralization titer against HIV-1(MN), and the RRs of infection for second-, third-, and fourth-quartile responses of antibody blocking of gp120 binding to soluble CD4 versus first-quartile responses (the lowest responses) were 0.35, 0.28, and 0.22, respectively.Despite inducing a complex, robust immune response, the vaccine was unable to reduce the incidence of HIV-1. Two interpretations of the correlative results are that the levels of antibodies (i) caused both an increased (low responders) and decreased (high responders) risk of HIV-1 acquisition or (ii) represented a correlate of susceptibility to HIV-1 but had no causal effect on susceptibility. Although the data cannot definitively discriminate between these 2 explanations, (ii) appears to be more likely.
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