The EPIICAL project: an emerging global collaboration to investigate immunotherapeutic strategies in HIV-infected children

Palma, P. et al. (2015) The EPIICAL project: an emerging global collaboration to investigate immunotherapeutic strategies in HIV-infected children. Journal of Virus Eradication, 1(3), pp. 134-139. (doi: 10.1016/S2055-6640(20)30510-0) (PMID:26893908) (PMCID:PMC4755515)

[img]
Preview
Text
110426.pdf - Published Version

407kB

Abstract

The EPIICAL (Early-treated Perinatally HIV-infected Individuals: Improving Children’s Actual Life with Novel Immunotherapeutic Strategies) project arises from the firm belief that perinatally infected children treated with suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART) from early infancy represent the optimal population model in which to study novel immunotherapeutic strategies aimed at achieving ART-free remission. This is because HIV-infected infants treated within 2–3 months of life have a much reduced viral reservoir size, and rarely show HIV-specific immunity but preserve normal immune development. The goal of EPIICAL is the establishment of an international collaboration to develop a predictive platform using this model to select promising HIV therapeutic vaccine candidates, leading to prioritisation or deprioritisation of novel immunotherapeutic strategies. To establish this platform, the EPIICAL Consortium aims to: develop predictive models of virological and immunological dynamics associated with response to early ART and to treatment interruption using available data from existing cohorts/studies of early-treated perinatally HIV-infected children; optimise methodologies to better characterise immunological, virological and genomic correlates/profiles associated with viral control; test novel immunotherapeutic strategies using in vivo proof-of-concept (PoC) studies with the aim of inducing virological, immunological and transcriptomic correlates/profiles equivalent to those defined by the predictive model. This approach will strengthen the capacity for discovery, development and initial testing of new therapeutic vaccine strategies through the integrated efforts of leading international scientific groups, with the aim of improving the health of HIV-infected individuals.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Yates, Professor Andrew
Authors: Palma, P., Foster, C., Zangari, P., Yates, A., Cotugno, N., Klein, N., Luzuriaga, K., Pahwa, S., Nastouli, E., Gibb, D.M., Borkowsky, W., Bernardi, S., Calvez, V., Manno, E., Mora, N., Compagnucci, A., Wahren, B., Muñoz-Fernández, M.Á., De Rossi, A., Ananworanich, J., Pillay, D., Giaquinto, C., and Rossi, P.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Infection & Immunity
Journal Name:Journal of Virus Eradication
Publisher:Mediscript Ltd
ISSN:2055-6640
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2015 The Author
First Published:First published in Journal of Virus Eradication 1:134-139
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

University Staff: Request a correction | Enlighten Editors: Update this record