About this Research Topic
Previous studies on HIV pathogenesis and HIV elite controllers have shown the importance of T cell responses in the control of viral replication. As such, there have been several clinical trials focusing on novel therapeutic vaccine approaches that aim to boost these T cell responses. However, despite promising results in a number of studies, the goal of achieving HIV remission off ART through these vaccines has remained elusive. Ongoing studies have been investigating various factors that could affect the immunogenicity of these vaccines including the type of vaccines and immunogens used, the specific HIV epitopes targeted, the effect of immunoregulatory cells and pathways, the correlates of protection, and even the clinical trial study design. Indeed, the past few years have ushered in novel techniques and concepts with the objective of developing and optimizing the next generation of T cell therapeutic vaccines.
In this Research Topic, we aim to present studies focusing on the various factors affecting efficacy of therapeutic T cell vaccines. These include:
• Novel vaccine delivery methods and vaccine design
• Identification of immunogenic HIV epitopes that can be targeted by the vaccines
• Optimized strategies with combination immunotherapies
• Novel assays to evaluate vaccine responses and correlates of protection
• The role of immunoregulatory or inhibitory pathways in therapeutic vaccine studies and approaches to address them
• Innovative T cell vaccine clinical trial designs
We welcome the submission of Original Research articles, Methods articles, Reviews, Mini-reviews and Clinical Trial articles covering any of the above subtopics.
Dr. Rinaldo holds a patent related to HIV immunotherapies. The other Topic Editors declare no conflict of interest with regards to the Research Topic theme.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.