HIV-1 envelope trimer vaccine induces sex-associated differences in antibody responses: a phase 1 clinical trial.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
A protective vaccine will be the most powerful instrument to reduce HIV-1 infections worldwide and help bring about a lasting end to the AIDS epidemic. The single centre, randomised, open-label, uncontrolled, phase 1 ACTHIVE-001 clinical trial (NCT03961438) aims to assess the safety and immunogenicity of the ConM SOSIP.v7 native-like trimer protein vaccine, based on an HIV-1 group M consensus sequence, in HIV-negative adults. Twenty-four individuals were enrolled to receive three dosages of ConM SOSIP.v7 protein vaccine in a liposome formulation containing a high dose of the TLR4-agonist MPLA. The primary outcome is vaccine reactogenicity, whereas the main secondary outcome is binding and neutralising antibody responses. Overall, the vaccine is safe and well-tolerated. Furthermore, the vaccine elicits robust strain-specific binding and neutralising antibody responses in nearly all vaccinees. Post-hoc exploratory analyses demonstrate that female-born participants have 22- and 6-fold higher neutralisation titres after the second and third vaccination, respectively. The vaccine adjuvant induces higher levels of IL-6 secretion from in vitro cultured monocytes from female compared to male participants, providing a possible mechanistic explanation for the sex-based differences. Our study highlights the need to take sex-based differences into consideration when assessing HIV-1 vaccine candidates and adjuvants.