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BACKGROUND: The clearance of high-risk oncogenic HPV (hrHPV) and related cervical lesions is associated with the development of a robust T cell response. Therapeutic vaccination that induces HPV antigen-specific T cells is a promising approach. METHOD: A two-vector dosing strategy using Chimpanzee Adenovirus Oxford 1 (ChAdOx1-HPV) and Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA-HPV), both encoding the same multiantigen HPV cassette was given on a 0/28-day schedule to participants with persistent cervical hrHPV and a history of low-grade cervical lesions. An open-label lead-in was followed by a randomized, blinded, placebo-controlled main phase. The primary endpoint was the safety of the different dose regimens; secondary endpoints included immunogenicity, and clearance of hrHPV and associated lesions at 12 months.Nine participants were enrolled in the lead-in and 99 were randomized 67:32 to five active dose arms or placebo, respectively. RESULTS: The regimens were well-tolerated with no Grade 3-related treatment emergent adverse events or serious adverse reactions. All dosing regimens generated antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses. There was no difference in hrHPV clearance between the pooled active groups and placebo (20/64 (31.3%) vs 10/30 (33.3%), p > 0.99), nor in lesion clearance. A trend toward higher hrHPV clearance (60%) was observed with the highest ChAdOx1-HPV doses. No association between the peripheral immune response and clearance was demonstrated. CONCLUSION: A heterologous, multi-antigenic HPV two-component immunotherapy regimen was well-tolerated and immunogenic but did not result in a statistically significant clearance of either hrHPV or the associated cervical lesions in women with persistent high-risk HPV infections.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/cid/ciaf658

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2025-12-17T00:00:00+00:00

Keywords

ChAdOx1, HPV, MVA, immunotherapeutic