Mosaico study will recruit participants at high risk of HIV
In contrast with Africa — where women bear the brunt of new infections — in the U.S. and Europe men who have sex with men account for 57% of new infections, according to the International AIDS Society.
Also at a higher risk of HIV are transgender people. In a survey of 3 million HIV test results reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the percentage of transgender people who newly acquired HIV was triple the U.S. national average.
The HIV-negative volunteers in the new Mosaico trial, as in Imbokodo, will receive four injections over the course of a year, assigned to either the vaccine or a placebo. Neither the participants nor the researchers will know who is getting the actual vaccine.
All participants will receive a comprehensive HIV prevention package, according to trial designers. That includes risk-reduction counseling, condoms, and testing and treatment for sexually transmitted disease. In countries where pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP, is licensed or available, it will be offered to potential participants who may accept it in lieu of a vaccine.
A vaccine formulation tailored to HIV found in different regions
Imbokodo and Mosaico are both testing a new vaccine inspired by the concept of a mosaic, in that it is built using parts — like tiles — from many different HIV strains found around the world. The idea is to overcome HIV’s ability to rapidly escape, through mutation, the protection offered by a vaccine containing a single strain. Imbokodo was tailored from a patchwork of strains predominant in Africa. Mosaico will use a slightly different formulation because it will add, in the third and fourth injections, a protein from a family of HIV strains found more often outside Africa.
The first enrollees in Mosaico will be seen at a yet-to-be-chosen site in one of 16 participating American cities. Eventually, the trial will expand to 55 sites worldwide. Among the 21 U.S. sites will be the Hutch’s Seattle Vaccine Trials Unit.
Dr. Susan Buchbinder, an epidemiologist at the University of California at San Francisco and a principal investigator for HVTN, is leading the Mosaico study. “We are committed to ensuring that HIV vaccine trial results are generalizable to the populations that carry the greatest burden of HIV infection,” she said.
The Mosaico trial (HVTN 706/HPX3002) is supported by a collaboration led by Janssen Vaccines & Prevention B.V., part of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson; the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which is a part of the National Institutes of Health; and HVTN, which is funded by NIAID. Additional collaborators include the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity.