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Current antiretroviral therapy (ART) is highly effective to suppress plasma viral load to below the detection limit and to restore the host immunity, thus to prolong the survival of HIV-1-infected patients remarkably. However, HIV-1 will rebound to pre-treatment levels within weeks of interruption or irregular medication. The reason why HIV-1 would not be eradicated by powerful ART can be explained by that the reservoir of latent HIV-1 in resting CD4 T cells will persistently exist even long-term suppression of plasma viral RNA. Several therapeutic approaches that aim to prevent or delay viral rebound after treatment interruption, producing a post-treatment remission or functional cure of HIV-1, are being investigated. This study is to measure the size of viral reservoir and HIV-1-specific T cell response in HIV-1-infected patients during ART to help understand the mechanism of HIV-1 persistence, then to help establish a potential policy for functional cure.
Full description
Introduction
Current antiretroviral therapy (ART) is highly effective to suppress plasma viral load to below the detection limit and to restore the host immunity, thus to prolong the survival of HIV-1-infected patients remarkably. However, HIV-1 will rebound to pre-treatment levels within weeks of interruption or irregular medication1,2. The reason why HIV-1 would not be eradicated by powerful ART can be explained by that the reservoir of latent HIV-1 in resting CD4 T cells will persistently exist even long-term suppression of plasma viral RNA. Several therapeutic approaches that aim to prevent or delay viral rebound after treatment interruption, producing a post-treatment remission or functional cure of HIV-1, are being investigated3. This study is to measure the size of viral reservoir and HIV-1-specific T cell response in HIV-1-infected patients during ART to help understand the mechanism of HIV-1 persistence, then to help establish a potential policy for functional cure.
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Exclusion criteria
Duration and frequency A total of 48 weeks of follow-up, and laboratory measurement every 8 weeks
Laboratory measurement We will draw the blood specimen from subjects after they sign the informed consent. About 30 mL blood will be taken and sent for the determination of viral reservoir and HIV-1-specific T cell responses, every 8 weeks, from the baseline at enrollment to the end of 48 weeks.
HIV-1 Gag-specific T-cell responses Recombinant HIV-1 Gag p24 (5 ug/mL; Research Diagnostics, Inc.) will be used as HIV-1 antigen. PBMC (106) will be incubated with or without p24 in 24-well plats for 6 days. The frequency of T cells with BrdU incorporation will be measured by flow cytometry.
HIV Viral Reservoirs
Levels and contents of HIV viral reservoirs in the peripheral blood will be analyzed in CD4+ T cells(the major cell type harboring HIV reservoir) in 2 major components:
Proviral DNA Assessment The blood samples will be used to isolate CD4+ T cells for cellular DNA extraction.
Standardized aliquot amount of extracted DNA is used to determine HIV pvDNA level throughPCR-based quantitative assay targeting the conserved region of HIV gene. The HIV pvDNAlevel will be presented as copies per million CD4+ T cells.The input cell number is determined by a separate PCR targeting human endogenous gene(s).
Cell-associated (CA) HIV RNA Total cellular RNA will be extracted from CD4+ T cells to generate totalcomplementary DNA (cDNA) through reverse transcription. The cDNA is then used to determine CA HIV RNA level through PCR-based quantitative assay that targets the conserved sequences of HIV at a designated laboratory by Sponsor. The CA RNA level is presented a scopies of endogenous house-keeping gene transcripts, whose copy number will be determined independently by a separate PCR targeting the RNA transcripts of the house-keeping gene.
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35 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
SZU-MIN Hsieh, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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