Abstract

Background Although combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) has saved millions of lives, it is incapable of full immune reconstitution and virus eradication. The transactivator of transcription (Tat) protein is a key human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) virulence factor required for virus replication and transmission. Tat is expressed and released extracellularly by infected cells also under cART and in this form induces immune dysregulation, and promotes virus reactivation, entry and spreading. Of note, anti-Tat antibodies are rare in natural infection and, when present, correlate with asymptomatic state and reduced disease progression. This suggested that induction of anti-Tat antibodies represents a pathogenesis-driven intervention to block progression and to intensify cART. Indeed Tat-based vaccination was safe, immunogenic and capable of immune restoration in an open-label, randomized phase II clinical trial conducted in 168 cART-treated volunteers in Italy. To assess whether B-clade Tat immunization would be effective also in patients with different genetic background and infecting virus, a phase II trial was conducted in South Africa.MethodsThe ISS T-003 was a 48-week randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate immunogenicity (primary endpoint) and safety (secondary endpoint) of B-clade Tat (30 μg) given intradermally, three times at 4-week intervals, in 200 HIV-infected adults on effective cART (randomised 1:1) with CD4+ T-cell counts ≥200 cells/µL. Study outcomes also included cross-clade anti-Tat antibodies, neutralization, CD4+ T-cell counts and therapy compliance.ResultsImmunization was safe and well-tolerated and induced durable, high titers anti-Tat B-clade antibodies in 97 % vaccinees. Anti-Tat antibodies were cross-clade (all vaccinees tested) and neutralized Tat-mediated entry of oligomeric B-clade and C-clade envelope in dendritic cells (24 participants tested). Anti-Tat antibody titers correlated positively with neutralization. Tat vaccination increased CD4+ T-cell numbers (all participants tested), particularly when baseline levels were still low after years of therapy, and this had a positive correlation with HIV neutralization. Finally, in cART non-compliant patients (24 participants), vaccination contained viral load rebound and maintained CD4+ T-cell numbers over study entry levels as compared to placebo.ConclusionsThe data indicate that Tat vaccination can restore the immune system and induces cross-clade neutralizing anti-Tat antibodies in patients with different genetic backgrounds and infecting viruses, supporting the conduct of phase III studies in South Africa.Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01513135, 01/23/2012Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12977-016-0261-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Combined antiretroviral therapy has saved millions of lives, it is incapable of full immune reconstitution and virus eradication

  • 2 participants were diagnosed with pulmonary 358 tuberculosis, 1 patient was admitted to the hospital for respiratory tract infection, bronchiectasis359 empyema thoracis and abdominal pain, 1 patient underwent hysterectomy, and intentional self360 injury was reported in 2 participants

  • In most vaccine trials conducted in treated patients combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) therapy was interrupted to assess the potency of the immunological control of infection provided by vaccination, while they were not aimed at evaluating the immunological recovery, with the exclusion of CD4+ T cell counts, which, did not appear to go beyond the restoration provided by cART alone [9, 79]

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Summary

Introduction

Combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) has saved millions of lives, it is incapable of full immune reconstitution and virus eradication. Anti-Tat Abs are uncommon in natural infection and, when present, correlate with the asymptomatic state, higher CD4+ T-cell number, lower viral load, and reduced disease progression [66,67,68,69,70] This suggested that the induction of effective anti-Tat Abs represents a pathogenesis-driven intervention to block progression and to intensify cART efficacy. Neutralization predicted HIV-1 DNA decay [57] Based on these data, a 48-week randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled phase II study was conducted in cART-treated South African adult volunteers to verify the immunogenicity and safety of the B-clade Tat vaccine in a population with a different genetic background and mainly infected with a C clade virus. CD4+ T-cell counts were monitored for the entire trial, and the relationship between neutralization and CD4+ T-cell counts, as well as between anti-Tat and anti-Env Ab titers and neutralization, were examined

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