Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
This research study is being done to find out how the immune system in the small intestines improves after taking antiretroviral (anti-HIV) medications. Biopsies (small snips of tissue) will be taken from the part of the intestines just below the stomach, and will be studied in the laboratory. The main purpose of this study is to measure the increase in the numbers of immune cells in the intestines to see if this number is related to the amount of medication that reaches the intestinal tissue, and the amount of virus that is still hiding there.
Subjects are either normal control subjects without HIV or, are HIV positive and are about to start HIV medications. As part of this study, HIV positive patients will be randomized to receive one of three possible combinations of medications.
Both Maraviroc and Raltegravir each represent new classes of medications in the way that they interfere with HIV making copies of itself. Maraviroc attaches to the surface of the T-cell that the virus uses to get into the cell and is therefore known as an entry inhibitor. Raltegravir blocks the virus from inserting itself into the DNA of the infected cell's nucleus and is therefore known as an Integrase Inhibitor. We hope to learn more about how antiretroviral drugs affect T cells and how immune function restores itself when HIV infection is treated.
Full description
Despite improved survival, durable virologic suppression, and increases in peripheral CD4+ T-cell counts in patients receiving potent antiretroviral therapy (ART), immune reconstitution remains incomplete as measured by a number of additional surrogate markers. Perhaps critically important among areas of apparent incomplete immune recovery is the gastrointestinal-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT), where CD4+ T-cells repopulate very slowly if at all. Several new classes of antiretrovirals (ART) have recently been approved by the FDA that offer potential advantages in terms of immune reconstitution and/or the kinetics viral suppression over traditionally available treatment regimens. Maraviroc is a new ART agent from a novel class of HIV inhibitors, entry inhibitors, that results in rapid suppression of HIV and recovery of peripheral CD4+ T-cells. This project proposes to examine whether volunteers receiving maraviroc recover GALT immune cells more completely that those taking comparator ART. Raltegravir is an integrase inhibitor that blocks incorporation of the proviral HIV DNA into the host chromosomes leading to more rapid declines in plasma HIV load than has previously been observed. This project proposes to examine whether volunteers receiving maraviroc or maraviroc plus raltegravir recover GALT immune cells more completely that those taking comparator ART. An additional attraction of the use of maraviroc and raltegravir together is that they may provide a potent combination that is also lipid neutral and thereby constitute a 'Heart friendly HAART' (Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
44 participants in 4 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal