Abstract

BackgroundMany candidate vaccine strategies against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are under study, but their clinical development is lengthy and iterative. To accelerate HIV vaccine development optimised trial designs are needed. We propose a randomised multi-arm phase I/II design for early stage development of several vaccine strategies, aiming at rapidly discarding those that are unsafe or non-immunogenic.MethodsWe explored early stage designs to evaluate both the safety and the immunogenicity of four heterologous prime-boost HIV vaccine strategies in parallel. One of the vaccines used as a prime and boost in the different strategies (vaccine 1) has yet to be tested in humans, thus requiring a phase I safety evaluation. However, its toxicity risk is considered minimal based on data from similar vaccines. We newly adapted a randomised phase II trial by integrating an early safety decision rule, emulating that of a phase I study. We evaluated the operating characteristics of the proposed design in simulation studies with either a fixed-sample frequentist or a continuous Bayesian safety decision rule and projected timelines for the trial.ResultsWe propose a randomised four-arm phase I/II design with two independent binary endpoints for safety and immunogenicity. Immunogenicity evaluation at trial end is based on a single-stage Fleming design per arm, comparing the observed proportion of responders in an immunogenicity screening assay to an unacceptably low proportion, without direct comparisons between arms. Randomisation limits heterogeneity in volunteer characteristics between arms. To avoid exposure of additional participants to an unsafe vaccine during the vaccine boost phase, an early safety decision rule is imposed on the arm starting with vaccine 1 injections. In simulations of the design with either decision rule, the risks of erroneous conclusions were controlled <15%. Flexibility in trial conduct is greater with the continuous Bayesian rule. A 12-month gain in timelines is expected by this optimised design. Other existing designs such as bivariate or seamless phase I/II designs did not offer a clear-cut alternative.ConclusionsBy combining phase I and phase II evaluations in a multi-arm trial, the proposed optimised design allows for accelerating early stage clinical development of HIV vaccine strategies.

Highlights

  • Many candidate vaccine strategies against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are under study, but their clinical development is lengthy and iterative

  • Characteristics of the proposed optimised phase I/II design We propose a randomised four-arm phase I/II design with two independent binary endpoints for safety and immunogenicity, including a safety decision rule for vaccine 1 during the prime vaccination phase in arm 1 (Figure 1)

  • Previous research has shown that a positive IFN-γ enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) response does not necessarily predict a protective vaccine effect against HIV acquisition [47], it is assumed that the IFN-γ ELISPOT response is at least a marker that the vaccine has some effect on the T-cells of the immune system

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Summary

Introduction

Many candidate vaccine strategies against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are under study, but their clinical development is lengthy and iterative. Several promising approaches to prevent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection have been put forth in the recent years [1,2,3,4], the development of a prophylactic vaccine strategy remains a key goal in the effort to end the HIV epidemic. Results of a phase IIB trial in Thailand (RV144 trial), combining a virus-vector vaccine prime with a subunit boost, showed a modest protective effect of the tested HIV vaccine strategy [5]. Clinical development of the components of the HIV vaccine strategy evaluated in the RV144 trial started in the mid-1990s in Thailand, the results of the aforementioned phase IIB trial only became available in 2009. A confirmatory phase III trial with an improved vaccine strategy is not projected to start before 2019 [6,7]

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