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Background:
The immune system helps the body fight off disease. Most people infected with HIV cannot control the infection and need daily medicine. Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) are drugs taken to prevent HIV infection from damaging the immune system. Researchers want to study why some people develop resistance to the drugs or have permanent side effects.
Objective:
To study the impact of a short-term treatment stop on HIV that persists even while taking cART.
Eligibility:
Adults 18-65 years old with HIV who are being treated with cART
Design:
Full description
While antiretroviral therapy (ART) has improved the clinical outcome for HIV-infected individuals, persistence of viral reservoirs in the peripheral blood and lymphoid tissues remains a hurdle to the eradication of virus. The vast majority of HIV-infected individuals treated with ART experience plasma viral rebound within weeks of cessation of therapy. Considering that current research regarding treatment has been heavily focused on developing strategies aimed at achieving sustained virologic remission in the absence of ART, it is of crucial importance to investigate the impact of short-term treatment interruption and re-initiation of ART on transcriptional, immunologic, and virologic parameters in HIV-infected individuals. Currently, much of our knowledge regarding the mechanism of viral rebound is based on investigations using structured treatment interruptions in supervised clinical settings dating back to 1999. Subsequent studies, performed primarily in chronically infected patients to minimize treatment exposure and toxicity, revealed poor outcomes in terms of viral rebound, clinical events and mortality 3-11 leading to the abandonment of this genre of investigation. However, various aspects have been identified as potential contributors to the observed negative outcomes including outmoded ART regimens, infrequent post-interruption monitoring, and repeated cycles of prolonged analytical treatment interruption (ATI). While long-term ATI was found to be associated with a decrease in CD4+ T cells, persistent plasma viremia, and an increased risk of opportunistic infections, it is unclear whether short term ATI elicits similar immunologic and virologic consequences in those receiving modern and efficacious ART. Furthermore, the mechanism, kinetics, degree, as well as immunologic and virologic predictors, of plasma viral rebound in patients receiving contemporary antiretroviral drug regimens after cessation of ART have not been explicitly investigated. Nor has the impact of persistent HIV reservoir size been fully correlated to the dynamics of plasma viral rebound in patients receiving modern drug regimens. As we develop clinical trials aimed at therapeutic and curative interventions, an integral component in design will require an ATI phase. Characterizing the corollaries of brief treatment cessation and re-initiation of ART on the dynamics of immunologic parameters and HIV reservoirs will provide valuable information for the design of future trials essential to our interpretation of the results as well as to ensuring the safest environment for the patients. We propose to examine the effect of ATI on plasma viral rebound, changes in immunologic parameters and the dynamics of viral reservoirs in HIV-infected individuals receiving state-of-the-art antiretroviral drug regimens following discontinuation and reinitiation of therapy.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Age, 18-65 years
Documented HIV-1 infection and clinically stable
In general good health, with an identified primary health care provider for medical management of HIV infection and willing to maintain a relationship with a primary health care provider for medical management of HIV infection while participating in the study
CD4+ T cell count greater than 450 cells/mm^3 at screening
Documentation of continuous ART treatment with suppression of plasma viral level below the limit of detection for greater than or equal to 2 years. Subjects with blips (i.e., detectable viral levels on ART) prior to creening may be included provided they satisfy the following criteria:
Willingness to undergo ATI
Willingness to restart ART once restart criteria are met
Laboratory values within pre-defined limits at screening:
Absolute neutrophil count greater than 1,000/mm^3
Hemoglobin (Hgb) levels greater than 10.0 g/dL for men and greater than 9.0 g/dL for women
Platelet count greater than 150,000/mm^3
Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) greater than or equal to 60 mL/min as determined by the NIH Clinical Center (CC) laboratory
Aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels of less than 2.5 x upper limit normal (ULN)
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Chronic hepatitis B, as evidenced by a positive test for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), an isolated positive Hepatitis B core antibody (negative HBsAg and anti-HBV Ab) and/or positive Hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA.
Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection as evidenced by a positive test for HCV RNA. Subjects with a positive test for HCV antibody and a negative test for HCV RNA are eligible.
Has a history of institution of ART within 12 weeks of being diagnosed with acute or early HIV-1, where acute/early infection is defined by any one of the following:
Documented nadir CD4+ T cell count less than 200 cells /mm^3
--Patients with a nadir CD4+ T cell count between 100-200 are not excluded, provided their current CD4+ T cell count has been >450 the past 3 years
---Subjects with dips (i.e., transient decreases in their CD4 count) prior to screening may be included provided they satisfy the following criteria:
Any history of AIDS defining opportunistic infections
Subjects with history of receiving ART consisting of mono or dual drug therapy
Documented multiclass antiretroviral drug resistance that, in the judgement of the investigator, would pose a risk of virologic failure should additional mutations develop during the study
Any experimental non-HIV vaccination received within 2 weeks prior to study enrollment and at any time during the study.
Any licensed or experimental non-HIV vaccination (e.g., hepatitis B, influenza, pneumococcal polysaccharide) received within 2 weeks prior to study enrollment/Day 0
Receipt of other investigational study agent within 28 days of enrollment/day 0 and at any time during the study
Any active malignancy that may require systemic chemotherapy or radiation therapy
Systemic immunosuppressive medications received within 3 months prior to enrollment. The following are not excluded: (1)corticosteroid nasal spray or inhaler; (2) topical corticosteroids for mild, uncomplicated dermatitis; and (3) oral/parenteral corticosteroids administered for non-chronic conditions not expected to recur (length of therapy less than or equal to 10 days, with completion in greater than or equal to 30 days prior to enrollment/day 0)
History of or other clinical evidence of:
Active drug or alcohol abuse or any other pattern of behavior that, in the opinion of the investigator, would interfere with adherence to study requirements
Both male and female subjects to remain completely abstinent of potentially reproductive sexual intercourse (e.g. due to a committed lifestyle) or to consistently use BOTH a barrier method with a spermicide (male or female condom) AND ALSO one of the below listed methods of birth control:
Females of childbearing potential must not be breast-feeding, possibly or actually pregnant, must not have had unprotected intercourse for one month prior to enrollment , and must agree not to become pregnant beginning from enrollment in the study to at least 8 weeks after the end of analytical treatment interruption.
29 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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