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Active Immunization of HIV-Infected Pregnant Women: A Phase I Study of Safety and Immunogenicity of a rgp120/HIV-1 Vaccine (NOTE: Some Patients Receive Placebo)

Active Immunization of HIV-Infected Pregnant Women: A Phase I Study of Safety and Immunogenicity of a rgp120/HIV-1 Vaccine (NOTE: Some Patients Receive Placebo)

Status
Withdrawn
Phases
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00001046
Enrollment
0
Registered
2001-08-31
Start date
Unknown
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2021-11-01

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

HIV Infections, Pregnancy, HIV Seronegativity

Keywords

Vaccines, Synthetic, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious, AIDS-Related Complex, HIV Envelope Protein gp120, HIV Preventive Vaccine, HIV Therapeutic Vaccine

Brief summary

PRIMARY: To evaluate the short-term safety of rgp120/HIV-1SF2 vaccine versus MF59 placebo administered to HIV-infected pregnant women. SECONDARY: To evaluate the immunogenicity and long-term safety of rgp120/HIV-1SF2 in HIV-infected pregnant women who received the vaccine during pregnancy only or during pregnancy and postpartum. To evaluate immunogenicity and safety in the infant through 18 months of age following maternal immunization with the vaccine during pregnancy. Active immunization of HIV-infected women during pregnancy may slow the progression of maternal disease, reduce the titer of virus in maternal plasma, and increase the titer of epitope-specific antibody. Also, active immunization has the potential to induce primary immunity in the fetus and to boost both T-cell and humoral immune responses to HIV in the mothers.

Detailed description

Active immunization of HIV-infected women during pregnancy may slow the progression of maternal disease, reduce the titer of virus in maternal plasma, and increase the titer of epitope-specific antibody. Also, active immunization has the potential to induce primary immunity in the fetus and to boost both T-cell and humoral immune responses to HIV in the mothers. Women are randomized to receive rgp120/HIV-1SF2 vaccine or MF59 placebo. Patients receive the first immunization between 16 and 24 weeks gestation and monthly thereafter until delivery, for a maximum of five immunizations. Patients may continue to receive the immunization regimen to which they were originally assigned at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months postpartum. Maternal follow-up continues until 18 months postpartum; infants are followed until age 18 months.

Interventions

BIOLOGICALMF59

Sponsors

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Lead SponsorNIH

Study design

Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
16 Years to 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

Concurrent Medication: Allowed during pregnancy: * AZT. * Methadone maintenance. NOTE: * Patients may not initiate antiretroviral therapy for disease progression. NOTE: * Patients may change from AZT to another antiretroviral agent or may begin antiretroviral therapy following delivery, if clinically indicated. Patients must have: * Documented HIV infection. * CD4 count \>= 400 cells/mm3 (average of two determinations obtained 1 week apart). * No clinical criteria for a diagnosis of AIDS. * HIV p24 antigen \<= 30 pg/ml. * Estimated gestational age between 16 and 24 weeks, confirmed by baseline sonogram that does not demonstrate any congenital abnormalities considered to be incompatible with life. * Intention to carry pregnancy to term. * Willingness to be followed by an ACTU for the duration of the study. NOTE: * Father of the fetus (if available after a reasonable attempt to contact him) must provide informed consent. Prior Medication: Allowed: * AZT.

Exclusion criteria

Co-existing Condition: Patients with the following symptoms or conditions are excluded: * Known hypersensitivity to a component of the vaccine. * Hepatitis B antigen positive at study entry. * Evidence of life-threatening or other serious pre-existing fetal abnormalities (e.g., anencephaly, renal agenesis, Potter's syndrome). * Evidence of syphilis that requires therapy during this pregnancy. * Intention to breast-feed. Presence of obstetrical high-risk factors such as: * insulin-dependent diabetes * hypertension requiring the use of anti-hypertensive therapy * repeated intrauterine fetal demise * Rh-sensitization or other blood group alloimmunization * diseases requiring use of immunosuppressive therapy (e.g., asthma, lupus). Concurrent Medication: Excluded during pregnancy: * Antiretrovirals other than AZT. * Immunomodulating agents (e.g., HIVIG, IVIG). * Other investigational drugs or immunosuppressive agents. NOTE: * Patients may change from AZT to another antiretroviral agent or may begin antiretroviral therapy following delivery, if clinically indicated. Prior Medication: Excluded within 90 days prior to study entry: * Antiretrovirals other than AZT. * Immunomodulating agents (e.g., HIVIG, IVIG). Current use of illicit drugs or chronic alcohol use by patient history.

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026