[AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Le principali novità dai congressi riguardanti la malattia da HIV (CROI, IAS/IAC, ICAAC...) e i nostri commenti.
Dora
Messaggi: 7493
Iscritto il: martedì 7 luglio 2009, 10:48

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da Dora » domenica 22 luglio 2012, 22:31

cesar78 ha scritto:Da un tweet di Anlaids di 1 ora fa:

"Lewin a meeting community su cura: presentati ieri due pazienti in terapia senza #hiv rilevabile dopo trapianto allogenico di midollo"

che significa? che ci sono altri due pazienti di berlino? :o "in terapia"? prima o dopo trapianto? :shock:
Non so, però c'è questo abstract (ancora sotto embargo) di Kuritzkes:

Long-term reduction in peripheral blood HIV-1 reservoirs following reduced-intensity conditioning allogeneic stem cell transplantation in two HIV-positive individuals

Appena toglieranno l'embargo, ne sapremo qualcosa di più.

Intanto, ci sono aggiornamenti da Hütter e Deeks sul caso di Timothy Brown: http://www.hivforum.info/forum/viewtopi ... 238#p20238.



Dora
Messaggi: 7493
Iscritto il: martedì 7 luglio 2009, 10:48

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da Dora » venerdì 27 luglio 2012, 7:17

La conferenza stampa di Deeks ("paziente tedesco"), Kurtzikes (trapianto staminali nei due "pazienti bostoniani), Margolis (SAHA per eradicare il reservoir dei CD4) e Saez-Cirión (HAART in fase acuta) sulla ricerca di una cura e sulle rispettive ricerche, tenutasi ieri a Washington.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uj8leBMT440&feature=player_embedded



Dora
Messaggi: 7493
Iscritto il: martedì 7 luglio 2009, 10:48

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da Dora » domenica 29 luglio 2012, 7:04

Il report di Nadir su AIDS 2012.

IAC 2012: REPORT DALLA CONFERENZA MONDIALE - ANTICIPAZIONE DELTA 59

"Verso la cura", trattamento come prevenzione, studi clinici principali. Intervista a M Marcowitz, Direttore della Ricerca dell’Aaron Diamond Center dell’Università di New York.

Simone Marcotullio, David Osorio, Filippo von Schloesser.


Ora che all’orizzonte appaiono concetti nuovi come la profilassi pre-esposizione, (approvata da FDA e OMS), la prospettiva dell’eradicazione del virus e ora che gli USA sono riusciti a cancellare la legge che proibiva l’ingresso nel paese alle persone con HIV, tutti i politici corrono a mettere il cappello sulla seggiola e dichiarano che, come recita lo slogan di questa edizione “TURNING THE TIDE TOGETHER”, dobbiamo bloccare l’ondata insieme. Hillary Clinton, Ban Ki moon, il presidente della Banca Mondiale, la senatrice Barbara Lee di San Francisco, tutti ora lavorano, si impegnano e promettono fondi per raggiungere l’obiettivo. Ma ci sono voluti 22 anni per cancellare la legge firmata da G. Bush nel 1990 che aveva impedito, con il divieto di accesso alle persone con HIV, la realizzazione di congressi IAC: dal 1988 nessuna conferenza internazionale aveva avuto luogo nella moderna e liberale America. I delegati, ventimila, da ogni parte del mondo, hanno festeggiato al Villaggio Globale il recente accesso alla terapia delle popolazioni più emarginate, proprio grazie ai programmi di aiuto internazionali quali Pepfar, deciso inizialmente da GW Bush e finanziato da Obama. Nei loro occhi la speranza di essere Protagonisti degli eventi, i membri della società civile, supportati da governi, iniziative umanitarie, fondazioni, volontari e industrie farmaceutiche, presenti alla Conferenza, tutti per testimoniare che insieme si può sperare in una “AIDS-free generation”.

Treatment is prevention

Concetto ampiamente discusso nelle passate conferenze è stato uno dei motori delle giornate di Washington. Ricordiamo in particolare a tale proposito le parole di Francis Collins, attivista di New York, il quale ha ricordato che, grazie alla capillare distribuzione di farmaci e di siringhe, negli ultimi anni l’incidenza di positività tra le persone che fanno uso di droghe iniettive nella sua regione, è sceso dal 13% all’1%. I Paesi intelligenti cominciano a capire che la prevenzione farmacologica, il profilattico, il test e l’accesso più ampio alla terapia possono essere l’unica arma per diminuire le nuove infezioni e, a lungo termine, ridurre i costi economici e sociali dell’infezione. L’Italia si può considerare tra questi Paesi?

Verso la cura

Il programma, guidato dalla premio Nobel Francoise Barré Sinoussi, ha catturato l’attenzione di tutta la comunità scientifica. Ha come obiettivo l’eradicazione del virus che per oltre un decennio non aveva trovato uno sviluppo. I 14 programmi di ricerca lanciati in questa direzione prevedono risultati ancora lontani, ma raggiungibili, la comunità scientifica comincia a crederci e richiede finanziamenti adeguati in un periodo difficile per le economie occidentali. Le priorità che l’International AIDS Society ha disegnato, sono le seguenti:
  • - Determinare i meccanismi cellulari e virali che mantengono la persistenza dell’HIV, compresi quelli che contribuiscono al mantenimento o alla latenza dell’infezione ed il ruolo della proliferazione omeostatica;
    - Determinare le fonti cellulari della persistenza nelle persone trattate con ART a lungo termine;
    - Determinare le origini dell’attivazione immunitaria e dell’infiammazione in presenza di ART e le ragioni della persistenza dell’HIV;
    - Determinare i meccanismi immunitari dell’ospite che controllano l’HIV, ma permettono la persistenza;
    - Studiare, paragonare e validare i test per misurare la persistenza dell’infezione;
    - Sviluppare e studiare gli agenti terapeutici o le strategie immunologiche per eliminare l’infezione latente senza creare danni alle persone in ART;
    - Sviluppare e testare strategie di rafforzamento della capacità di risposta dell’ospite per controllare la replicazione virale attiva.
STUDI CLINICI

CD4 e rischio morte (Drechsler H, abs MOPE113)

Dai dati della Veterans Cohort emerge che i livelli di CD4 al di sotto dei 700 sono predittori indipendenti di morte per qualunque causa. Questa analisi coinvolge 15714 pazienti americani con carica virale al di sotto delle 400 copie. Altri fattori indipendenti che correlano significativamente ad un aumentato rischio di morte sono la coinfezione con virus epatitico e l’utilizzo di stavudina. Inoltre, chi è aderente alla terapia riduce notevolmente il rischio morte. Da notare che, in confronto a chi raggiunge CD4 > 500, chi invece li ha tra 350 e 499 ha il 70% di rischio aggiuntivo di morte (HR 1.70, 95% CI 1.26 to 2.30). I ricercatori parlano dunque di “necessità di normalizzazione” dei livelli CD4, facendo intuire l’importanza di una intercettazione precocissima delle infezioni, ma soprattutto l’importanza di riuscire, in presenza di terapia antiretrovirale efficace, a mantenere i livelli di CD4 davvero elevati.

Elvitegravir non inferiore a raltegravir a 96 settimane (Elion R, abs TUAB0105)

In uno studio in doppio cieco, randomizzato e controllato, la combinazione di elvitegravir (QD) + IP/r + 1 terzo farmaco si è dimostrata non inferiore a raltegravir (BID) + IP/r + 1 terzo farmaco a 96 settimane su 702 pazienti pretrattati con resistenze almeno a due classi e con viremia rilevabile (> 1000 cp/mL). L’IP/r più utilizzato è stato darunavir/r (> 50%), a seguire LPV/r (20%). A 48 settimane, l’efficacia virologica era simile nei due bracci (59% versus 58% con carica virale < 50 cp/mL). A 96 settimane la percentuale di interruzione per qualunque causa è stata elevata in entrambi i bracci (41% versus 42%). La mancanza di efficacia è la spiegazione rispettivamente nel 17% e nel 21% dei casi. La risposta virologica a 96 settimane è stata del 53.6% versus 56.4% (analisi missing = failure). L’emersione di resistenze all’integrasi è stata del 6.6% versus 7.4%. Simili le percentuali di eventi avversi di grado 3-4 (attorno al 24%). Maggiore l’incidenza di diarrea nel braccio con elvitegravir (13% contro 8%).

Cobicistat non inferiore a ritonavir (Gallant J, abs TUAB0103)

Come booster di atazanavir in pazienti naive, cobicistat ha fornito prova di non inferiorità rispetto a ritonavir a 48 settimane, se in associazione con TDF/FTC. Lo studio, randomizzato e in doppio cieco, ha riguardato 692 pazienti con carica virale > 5000 cp/mL, qualunque conta di CD4 e eGFR > 70 mL/min. L’obiettivo primario dello studio era la percentuale di persone con carica virale < 50 cp/mL a 48 settimane (rispettivamente 83% versus 85% per il tempo di perdita di risposta virologica). La percentuale di non soppressione è stata del 6% versus 4%. Solo nel braccio con cobicistat sono emerse mutazioni in due pazienti (M184V/I). Gli AEs sono stati 11% versus 7%. Migliore il profilo lipidico dei pazienti assuntori di cobicistat rispetto a ritonavir. 5 su 6 pazienti hanno interrotto lo studio per tossicità renale. Sarà importante monitorare nella pratica clinica gli aspetti di tollerabilità, nonché verificare la percentuale di emersione di ceppi resistenti nei fallimenti.

Switch da IP/r a TDF/FTC/RPV in singola compressa (Palella F, abs TUAB0104)

Presentato uno studio (SPIRIT) molto atteso in merito alla semplificazione gestionale del paziente: riguarda lo switch da pazienti con viremia soppressa da almeno 6 mesi che assumono 2 NRTI+IP/r versus la singola compressa (STR) con il nuovo NNRTI rilpivirina. Lo studio è a 24 settimane, randomizzato (2:1), in aperto e ha confrontato coloro che hanno mantenuto il regime versus coloro che hanno cambiato. La non inferiorità virologica è stata al momento provata, per un totale di 476 persone (317 hanno switchato e 159 sono rimasti con il regime del basale). Gli IP coinvolti sono: atazanavir, lopinavir e darunavir. Dopo 24 settimane, il 93.4% dei pazienti nel braccio STR ha mantenuto la non rilevabilità di carica virale plasmatica versus l’89.9% del braccio con IP/r. Migliore, complessivamente, la tollerabilità, specialmente sui lipidi del combinato STR (statisticamente significativa).

ATV/r + maraviroc a 96 settimane (Mills A, abs TUAB0102)

Anche se lo studio (A4001078) è piccolo (60 pazienti) e quindi con potenza statistica non adeguata, la combinazione NRTI sparing ATV/r + maraviroc (150 mg QD) su pazienti naive non ha mostrato i risultati attesi versus TDF/FTC + ATV/r. I partecipanti erano pazienti con virus CCR5 tropico, carica virale > 1000 cp/mL al basale e CD4 > 100 cellule. Esclusa al basale le resistenze ai singoli farmaci. A 96 settimane, la carica virale < 50 cp/mL è stata riscontrata rispettivamente nel 67.8% versus 83.6%. Migliore anche il guadagno di CD4 nel braccio con TDF/FTC. Gli eventi avversi di grado 3-4 sono stati rispettivamente del 53.3% versus 32.8%.

DRV/r + maraviroc a 48 settimane (Taiwo B, abs TUPE099)

24 i pazienti naive arruolati in questo studio con carica virale al basale tra le 5000 e le 500.000 copie/mL e CD4 > 100 cellule. Tutti avevano virus CCR5 tropico e nessuna resistenza al darunavir/r, ma con possibili mutazioni a NNRTI e NRTI. Il regime somministrato è stato MVC (150 mg QD) + DRV/r 800/100 mg QD. 4 dei 24 pazienti (16.7%) hanno avuto fallimento virologico (ossia VL > 50 cp/mL) alla settimana 48. Anche in questo caso ci si attendeva risultati migliori, tuttavia studi più articolati sono necessari per comprendere meglio l’utilizzo di questa combinazione, forse più adatta in pazienti con viremia non rilevabile.

QUAD (DeJesus, abs TUPE043 e Sax P, abs TUPE028)

Il combinato contenente TDF/FTC + elvitegravir + cobicistat si è dimostrato a 48 settimane non inferiore ad Atripla (TDF/FTC/EFV) in uno studio randomizzato. Le percentuali di successo virologico sono state rispettivamente del 88% versus 84% e indipendenti dal livello di carica virale e CD4 al basale. Buono il profilo di tollerabilità di QUAD, così come migliore si è dimostrato il guadagno di CD4 (238 versus 206). In un altro studio sulla stessa tipologia di pazienti e sempre a 48 settimane, QUAD ha dimostrato non inferiorità rispetto al regime TDF/FTC + ATV/r (VL < 50 cp/mL rispettivamente nel 90% e 87%). Analoghe, anche per questo studio, le conclusioni per caratteristiche al basale dei pazienti. Entrambe le ricerche hanno arruolato 700 pazienti.

Dolutegravir (Raffi F, SPRING-2, TUPE358)

Presentati i risultati a 48 settimane di questo studio di fase III su 822 pazienti naive, che associa dolutegravir (inibitore dell’integrasi senza booster) 50 mg QD e 2 NRTI (o TDF/FTC o ABC/3TC) versus raltegravir BID (randomizzazione 1:1). La proporzione dei pazienti con carica virale < 50 cp/mL è stata rispettivamente dell’88% versus 85%. Simile tra i bracci il guadagno di CD4 (+230) nonché il profilo di tollerabilità. I risultati sono stati indipendenti dal tipo di backbone utilizzato.

Raltegravir a 5 anni (J. Rockstroh, STARTMRK, J.J. Eron BENCHMRK, TUPE025)

Abbiamo più volte già riportato i risultati di questi studi, tuttavia è utile evidenziarne le analisi a 5 anni. Dallo studio STARTMRK, che confronta TDF/FTC + RAL versus EFV su pazienti naive, gli autori concludono che si evince la superiorità di questo regime in termini virologici e immunologici rispetto a quello di confronto. Su pazienti pretrattati, dagli studi BENCHMRK si evince la tenuta di regimi basati sul raltegravir con farmaci di accompagnamento ottimizzati secondo test di resistenza al basale.

Terapia antiretrovirale in infezione acuta (Markowitz M, abs TUPDB0204)

Iniziare la terapia antiretrovirale durante la prima settimana di infezione porta ad una normalizzazione dei livelli di CD8 attivati (che esprimono il CD38 e HLA-DR) dopo 48 e 96 settimane, indipendentemente se la combinazione di farmaci ne contiene 3 o 5. Anche il CD14, un marcatore di immunoattivazione, si normalizza. Questo è stato provato in un piccolo studio di 31 pazienti, dei quali 11 hanno assunto TDF/FTC + ATV/r o DRV/r e 21, oltre a questi farmaci, hanno assunto anche MVC e RAL.

HIV/HCV: risposta agli antiretrovirali durante l’utilizzo di boceprevir + PEG-INF+RBV (J Slim, WEPE053)

In questo studio su 100 pazienti boceprevir (BOC), nuovo farmaco per il trattamento dell’HCV, è stato somministrato al dosaggio 800 mg TID versus placebo (per il solo BOC) in associazione con Peg-INF + RBV (PR) per 44 settimane in pazienti coinfetti e in terapia antiretrovirale. Nonostante le note interazioni farmacocinetiche tra BOC e gli IP/r, l’utilizzo del farmaco non ha provocato un mancato controllo dell’infezione da HIV. Le diminuzioni osservate dei CD4 sono infatti consistenti con quelle usuali riscontrate nel trattamento con INF e sono simili tra i due gruppi.

Nuovi farmaci in bambini e adolescenti

Etravirina (Tudor-Williams G, abs TUAB0204) è stata sperimentata come strategia di salvataggio nello studio PIANO (48 settimane), in associazione con un NRTI e un IP/r. La risposta virologica è stata complessivamente del 56%, simile a quella degli studi DUET su adulti. Migliore il successo terapeutico nei bambini (6-12 anni) che negli adolescenti (12-18), probabilmente a causa dello stadio meno avanzato della malattia. Raltegravir (Nachman S, abs TUAB0205) si è dimostrato, in due formulazioni pediatriche, sicuro ed efficace sullo stesso target di pazienti sempre a 48 settimane (bambini fino a 2 anni di età). Lo studio IMPAACT P1066 ha mostrato, a seconda dei gruppi divisi per età e formulazione, una media di successo virologico attorno al 56%, con qualche differenza per gruppo di età e formulazione utilizzata. Dolutegravir (Hazra R, abs TUAB0203) a 4 settimane, quindi siamo ancora in fase preliminare, ha mostrato su medesima popolazione di giovani un decadimento virologico, quando associato ad background terapeutico ottimizzato, simile a quello riscontrato negli studi sulla popolazione adulta.

Vaccino quadrivalente HPV in donne HIV+ (Kojic EM, abs WEAB0203, Kahn J, abs WEAB0202)

Il vaccino attivo contro i ceppi 6, 11, 16 e 18 di HPV, si è dimostrato sicuro ed altamente immunogenico in uno studio (ACTG 5240) che ha riguardato 319 donne adulte HIV positive con CD4 al basale > 200 cellule. Analoghe considerazioni sono state fatte in un altro studio rivolto a giovani adolescenti, specie se in terapia antiretrovirale. I ricercatori, per entrambi gli studi, concludono in merito all’importanza di attuare precise strategie di vaccinazioni su queste popolazioni.


Intervista a Martin Marcowitz, Direttore della Ricerca dell’Aaron Diamond Center dell’Università di New York:

D: Alla luce di quanto vediamo e degli studi in essere, credi che sia realistico pensare all’eradicazione?

M: Forse sì, ma siamo davvero in una fase molto iniziale.

D: Dagli studi che stiamo vedendo, ritieni più opportuno trattare durante l’infezione acuta?

M: L’ho sempre fatto, ne sono un convinto assertore per mille motivi ed ora, dopo gli studi più recenti, ne ho la conferma: con gli strumenti a disposizione riusciamo a gestire gli effetti collaterali, possiamo gestire anche i fallimenti con i 26 farmaci di 6 classi. Bisogna considerare che prima trattiamo una persona, meno si nascondono nei compartimenti le particelle di virus e questa ha meno possibilità di infettare altre persone. Trattare fin dall’inizio non grava troppo sul paziente oggi: entro 2-4 anni dovrò comunque prescrivere la terapia, dunque in un periodo di oltre 50 anni di sopravvivenza, il peso della terapia precoce è ben poco. Bisognerebbe spiegare ai governanti che curare subito, oltre a prevenire il danno immunologico individuale, oltre a prevenire costose infezioni nell’individuo, ha l’effetto di prevenire nuovi contagi che a loro volta rappresentano un costo per la società. L’accesso alla terapia precoce non deve essere considerato una spesa, ma una operazione di costo-efficacia. E ormai anche le linee guida americane si sono orientate a raccomandare la terapia anche al di sopra dei 500 CD4.



Dora
Messaggi: 7493
Iscritto il: martedì 7 luglio 2009, 10:48

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da Dora » mercoledì 1 agosto 2012, 7:25

Il report di David Shepp per Natap su attivazione immunitaria, infiammazione e complicanze dell'HIV.

*** - Tantissimi altri report da AIDS 2012, scritti sia da Jules Levin, sia da Mark Mascolini, si possono leggere qui: http://www.natap.org/2012/IAS/IAS.htm. - ***

19th IAC 2012: Immune Activation, Inflammation and Complications of HIV

David H. Shepp, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine
Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine
North Shore University Hospital - Manhasset, NY

  • “Non-AIDS-defining cancers (NADC), liver disease and CVD are the leading non-AIDS-related causes of mortality and the proportion of deaths due to NADC is rising”

    “Multiple co-morbid diagnoses are more common in HIV-infected compared to age matched HIV-uninfected individuals. Immune activation and inflammation are present in untreated HIV, persist in many cases after otherwise effective ART and contribute to the increased risk of non-AIDS medical illnesses.”

    Intervention against inflammation are needed, ongoing research discussed reported at IAC below: initiation of ART very early in HIV infection, by Markowitz et al……Normalization of CD8+ T-cell activation (CD38+/HLA-DR+) to levels seen in healthy controls was achieved at 48 and 96 weeks”

    “5 weekly injections of IL-21 reversed the progressive depletion of Th17+ T-cells in intestinal mucosal tissues”

    “markers are needed that correlate with risk of clinical events, including non-AIDS medical illnesses, in patients already receiving ART”

    “Low level ongoing HIV replication & immunological non-response to HAART may cause activation & inflammation”


    HCV antibody positivity and lower current CD4 were all independently associated with higher levels of CD8+ immune activation”

    “higher BMI category was significantly associated with higher levels of the inflammatory markers”

Untreated HIV infection causes a state of immune activation and inflammation that drives the progressive loss of CD4+ T-cells and the development of immune dysfunction. Along with traditional risk factors such as aging, smoking, obesity, dyslipidemia, drug and alcohol abuse, chronic inflammation is an important contributor to the pathogenesis of many disease states, including cardiovascular/cerebrovascular disease (CVD), cancer, diabetes, liver disease, osteoporosis and neurocognitive dysfunction. Combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces but does not necessarily normalize chronic inflammation due to HIV. Therefore, chronic immune activation that exists before and persists after otherwise successful ART leaves patients at increased risk for non-AIDS medical illnesses. Updated information on mortality trends in HIV was presented at the XX International AIDS Conference (IAC), held in Washington DC, July 22-27. Data from the large D:A:D cohort showed overall mortality and deaths due to AIDS-related causes declined from 1999 to 2010 (Smith CJ. THAB0304). Non-AIDS-related illnesses now cause about 3/4 of deaths in HIV-infected individuals. Non-AIDS-defining cancers (NADC), liver disease and CVD are the leading non-AIDS-related causes of mortality and the proportion of deaths due to NADC is rising. Another cohort study of HIV-infected and HIV-negative individuals in Amsterdam demonstrated that in every age bracket, HIV-infected individuals are diagnosed with multiple comorbid illnesses more often than their HIV-negative counterparts. A multivariable analysis controlling for other know risk factors confirmed that being HIV-infected was independently associated with a doubling (OR 2.1) of risk for multiple comorbidities (Schouten J. THAB0205)

Causes of Inflammation. The pathogenesis of persistent immune activation in HIV-infected patients on ART is complex. Multiple causes have been identified. Microbial translocation due to persistent immunologic injury in gut-associated lymphoid tissue, chronic co-infections such as CMV and HCV, low-level HIV infection, metabolic derangements, effects of antiretrovirals (ARV), and incomplete or dysfunctional immune reconstitution may all play a role. Abstracts from the XX IAC presented new insights into some of these potential causes.

Low level HIV replication. Successful ART durably suppresses plasma HIV RNA, but a variable level of residual virus may remain. Some patients are intermittently detectable by standard clinical assays, while others are detectable only when more sensitive research techniques are used. When lymphoid tissue is sampled, most patients have residual HIV RNA. This ongoing, low-level HIV production may provide the antigenic stimulation to drive immune activation. Zheng et al. (MOPE012) studied 832 patients who were on ART in ACTG trials for at least 96 week and had HIV RNA <200 copies/mL. CD8+ T-cell activation (CD38+/HLA-DR+) was significantly reduced from pre-ART levels, but remained higher in those with HIV RNA between 51-200 copies/mL compared to those <50 copies. In those with HIV RNA <50 copies, older age, race/ethnicity, HCV antibody positivity and lower current CD4 were all independently associated with higher levels of CD8+ immune activation. A second study used a more sensitive assay to examine 871 Italian patients virologically suppressed below 50 copies/mL on long-term ART. Patients with plasma HIV RNA <3 copies/mL had significantly lower levels of CD8+ T-cell activation (CD38+/HLA-DR+) than did patients who experienced viral load blips above 50 copies/mL, but had similar activation levels to those with HIV RNA detectable between 3-50 (Bernardini C. MOPE008). Patients on NNRTI-based ART were found to have lower activation levels than those on either boosted or unboosted PI-based ART. This study also found age and HCV antibody positivity were independently associated with higher levels of CD8+ activation.

Co-infections. Despite good control of HIV replication by ART, immune activation in HIV may be driven by persistent or recurrent co-infections. Two abstract mentioned above (MOPE008, MOPE012) found HCV-infection was independently associated with higher CD8+ activation in patients responding to ART. A third small study focusing on elite controllers found a trend toward higher levels of activation markers (CD38+/HLA-DR+) in CD8+ but not CD4+ T-cells when HCV RNA was detected compared to elite controllers who were HCV antibody positive but RNA negative. In contrast, another small study (n=59) examining multiple markers of inflammation and immune activation found no difference in CD8+ activation markers among individuals with HIV mono-infection, HCV mono-infection, HIV/HCV co-infection with chronic HCV, and co-infection with cleared HCV (Howdowanec A. MOPE011). The HIV-infected patients were described as well controlled on ART. However, CD4+HLA-DR+ cells were elevated in the 3 HCV-infected groups while CD4+CD38+ cells were higher in the 3 HIV-infected groups, suggesting different activation markers may be selectively affected by these two infections. Among 9 cytokines assessed, only IL-10, an anti-inflammatory cytokine that down-regulates certain Th1 responses was found to be significantly higher in HIV/HCV co-infection compared to HIV mono-infection.

Metabolic Disturbances. A combination of genetics, diet and physical inactivity conspire to create a syndrome of visceral abdominal adiposity, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance and hypertension that is increasingly prevalent in the general population worldwide. This metabolic syndrome is associated with high CVD risk. Obesity, insulin resistance and dyslipidemia are also risk factors for cancer and liver disease. Markers of chronic inflammation are often present in such individuals, although which is “chicken” and which is “egg” is controversial. Weight gain is common in HIV-infected patients responding to ART. Some weight gain corresponds to a return to pre-HIV health status, but overweight and obesity are increasingly common problems. A multi-center longitudinal cohort study of 494 HIV-infected adults (95% using ART) studied the problem of obesity (Conley L. WEPE096). As defined by BMI, about 60% were overweight or obese. In univariate analysis, higher BMI category was significantly associated with higher levels of the inflammatory markers hsCRP, IL-6, TNF-alpha and d-dimer as well as higher total cholesterol, ApoE, insulin, leptin HOMA-IR and carotid intima-media thickness. The independent importance of each of these parameter was unclear as multivariate analysis was not presented.

Incomplete Immune Recovery on ART. Despite years of complete virologic suppression, many patients on ART fail to normalize CD4+ T-cell counts. Older age, lower nadir CD4+ counts and HCV co-infection are often cited associations with incomplete immune recovery, but these may be surrogates for higher levels of persistent immune activation. Previous studies have found higher levels of peripheral blood T-cell activation markers in immunologic non-responders (INR). Dunham et al. (MOPE023) compared INRs and immunologic responders (IR), defined as having CD4+ T-cell counts <350 and >500, respectively, after > 1 year of effective ART. CD4+ T-cell activation and proliferation markers were higher in the peripheral blood INRs, as was expression of MX1, an interferon-stimulated gene. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells and activated macrophages were more common in rectosigmoid mucosal biopsies of INRs compared to IRs. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that INRs have greater residual intestinal mucosal dysfunction, causing microbial translocation and systemic inflammation.

Prognosis. Markers of T-cell activation have been shown to be as powerful or perhaps even more powerful than HIV viral load and CD4+ T-cell counts in predicting disease progression and death in untreated HIV infection. Pre-ART inflammatory markers, including TNF-alpha and its receptors, hsCRP, IL-6, sCD14 and d-dimer all have shown correlation with disease progression and mortality in patients initiating ART. However, markers are needed that correlate with risk of clinical events, including non-AIDS medical illnesses, in patients already receiving ART. ACTG 320 was a randomized comparison of indinavir vs. placebo, both combined with zidovudine and lamivudine, that was published 15 years ago. The trial demonstrated the benefits of triple ART using the clinical endpoint of AIDS progression or death. Using stored serum, Spritzler et al. (MOPE007) designed a case-cohort analysis that examined the ability of soluble TNF-alpha receptor-II (sTNFR-II) and a panel of 94 other biomarkers to predict AIDS-related disease progression or death after adjustment for HIV RNA, CD4+ count, treatment randomization and other variables. sTNFR-II levels after 8 weeks of treatment independently correlated with the risk of AIDS progression/death. Numerous other markers were found to correlate with viral suppression but did not add to prediction of AIDS events/death. Three less well-studied markers (von Willebrand factor, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and IL-18) appeared to add prognostic value but require confirmation. In this study, non-AIDS events were not assessed. An analysis of a more contemporary study that included non-AIDS events also supported the value of sTNFR-II as a predictive marker. ACTG 5224s was a substudy of the larger ACTG 5202 which randomized treatment-naive patients to abacavir/lamivudine or tenofovir/emtricitabine with either efavirenz or ritonavir-boosted atazanavir. Multiple inflammatory biomarkers were measured at baseline and at weeks 24, 48 and 96 of study, and correlations with both AIDS and non-AIDS events were made. In analyses adjusting for other risk factors, time-updated levels of sTNFR-I and sTNFR-II had the strongest correlation with the combined endpoint of AIDS-related or non-AIDS events (McComsey G. THLBB06). When only baseline values were considered, hsCRP and IL-6 were also correlated with all events. AIDS and non-AIDS-related events were also analyzed separately with somewhat varying results, but these analyses were limited by the small numbers of endpoints.

Treatment. Recently reported trials of ART in treatment-naive patients have achieved viral suppression rates near 90%. While small improvements in ART are still possible, further advances in HIV care will more likely come from improved understanding and management of non-AIDS medical illnesses. Managing chronic inflammation will play an important role. Several presentations at this IAC suggested a few promising new approaches to reducing inflammation.

Aspirin (ASA) has both anti-thrombotic and anti-inflammatory effects, is inexpensive, has a well established adverse effect profile and is widely used for long-term CVD prevention. O’Brien et al. (THAB0202) reported a pilot study examining the effects of daily low dose (81 mg) daily ASA in both HIV-infected patients on ART and healthy volunteers. After one week, ASA significantly reduced the abnormal levels of platelet aggregation, soluble p-selectin (a marker of activated platelets an endothelial cells), CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activation (CD38+/HLA-DR+) and sCD14 (a marker of monocyte activation) found in HIV-infected subjects. Leukocyte responsiveness to TLR-4 agonists, an important component of the innate immune response to microbial translocation was also improved.

Numerous previous studies have attempted to reduce low-level residual viral production by intensifying standard ART, with largely negative results. However, certain ARVs have immunomodulatory properties. Maraviroc (MVC) is an ARV that blocks CCR5, which is both a co-receptor for HIV cell entry and a receptor for beta-chemokines. Previous studies of the effects of MVC intensification on immune activation have shown conflicting results but have not examined the impact on immune function. Westrop et al. (WEPE095) evaluated immune function in a 24 week, randomized placebo-controlled study of MVC intensification that included 47 patients already virologically suppressed on standard ART. MVC enhanced antibody response to intramuscular meningococcal but not oral cholera vaccine. Recall antibody response to tetanus toxoid was similar in both study arms. In vitro T-cell gamma interferon production in response to stimulation with HIV antigen and tetanus toxoid also appeared to improve with MVC.

Despite improvement or normalization of CD4+ T-cells counts in peripheral blood with ART, T-cell populations in lymphatic tissues remain abnormal. Immunologic abnormalities in gut-associated lymphoid tissues are thought to be a major cause of microbial translocation and resulting chronic immune activation in HIV-infected patients on ART. The status of two cytokines under investigation to improve immune reconstitution was reviewed in symposia at this year’s IAC. IL-7 is cytokine that plays a vital role in T-cell growth and regulation. It is produced within the fibroreticular cell network in the parafollicular zones of lymph nodes. HIV infection and associated inflammation causes fibrosis of these structures, impairing proper T-cell repopulation and function (Shacker T. MOSYS0603). Therapeutic administration of IL-7 offers the promise of correcting this abnormality. In a pilot study, IL-7 was shown to increase both peripheral CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells and had different, possibly more favorable effects on subsets of T-cells compared to IL-2, which was not clinically effective for treatment of HIV (Levy Y. MOSY0604). Increased CD4+ T-cells in the gut were seen in a small number of subjects who underwent biopsy, while circulating LPS and sCD14 decreased.

Th17 cells are a specific subset of T-cell that play an important role in the immune response to microbial infection and maintenance of mucosal integrity. Th17 depletion is seen in mucosal sites in both animal models of AIDS and human HIV infection. Loss of Th17 correlates with microbial translocation and systemic immune activation. IL-21 is a growth and differentiation factor for Th17 cells. In rhesus macaques, 5 weekly injections of IL-21 beginning 2 weeks after infection with pathogenic SIV did not affect SIV RNA or CD4+ T-cells in peripheral blood but reversed the progressive depletion of Th17+ T-cells in intestinal mucosal tissues that was seen in control animals at weeks 4 and 6 (Paiardini M. TUAA0305). Total CD4+ T-cell depletion in intestinal mucosa also was reversed and sustained after discontinuation of IL-21 such that by week 23, levels reached 46% of pre-infection values with IL-21 vs. only 12% in controls. Markers of T-cell proliferation were also reduced. Plasma levels of LPS and sCD14 were lower at week 23 in IL-21 treated animals, suggesting microbial translocation was controlled.

Another approach to reducing the effects of microbial translocation is treating gut microbes directly. Asmuth et al. described results of a single arm trial of oral serum bovine immunoglobulin (SBI) taken orally twice daily in 8 men with a diagnosis of HIV enteropathy (TUAA304). All subjects were on stable ART but had persistent GI symptoms. On treatment, these symptoms improved dramatically, a result that is hard to interpret in the absence of a control group. There was no effect on T-cells counts, activations markers, a panel of soluble markers of inflammation and microbial translocation, or measures of intestinal permeability and absorption. CD4+ T-cell percentages in duodenal biopsies improved when assessed by immunohistochemical staining, but not by flow cytometry. More encouraging results were obtained in a study of the non-absorbable antibiotic rifaxamin plus sulfasalazine, an anti-inflammatory agent used clinically for inflammatory bowel disease. The combination was given for 3 months to pigtail macaques who were simultaneously infected with pathogenic SIV. Compared to infected control animals, CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activations markers (CD38+/HLA-DR+) were decreased, as were various plasma markers of inflammation including d-dimer, sCD14, TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta and INF-gamma. No improvement in peripheral CD4+ T-cells was observed but less CD4+ T-cell depletion in the intestinal mucosa was seen. The same investigators are also using this model to evaluate sevelamer, a phosphate binder used in management of chronic kidney disease which can also bind LPS.

A conceptually simple approach to limiting injury to host mucosal defenses and subsequent microbial translocation is initiation of ART very early in HIV infection, before irreversible damage to gut-associated lymphoid tissues occurs. Markowitz et al. (TUPD0204) reported on a cohort of 31patients treated with ART during acute or early HIV infection. Normalization of CD8+ T-cell activation (CD38+/HLA-DR+) to levels seen in healthy controls was achieved at 48 and 96 weeks. The median estimated duration of infection at ART initiation was 52 days with a range of 19-155 days. The study used both a standard 3 drug and an intensified 5 drug regimen, but the number of ARVs did not appear to affect the normalization of immune activation.



Summary. With improvements in the efficacy of and access to ART, deaths due to AIDS-related illnesses are declining while non-AIDS medical illnesses are increasing. Multiple co-morbid diagnoses are more common in HIV-infected compared to age matched HIV-uninfected individuals. Immune activation and inflammation are present in untreated HIV, persist in many cases after otherwise effective ART and contribute to the increased risk of non-AIDS medical illnesses. New studies from the XX IAC enhance our understanding of the causes of chronic inflammation and point to potential applications in prognosis and treatment. In patients responding to ART, residual HIV replication detectable above 50 copies but not below increases T-cell activation in peripheral blood, as does HCV co-infection. Obesity is common in contemporary ART treated patients and is associated with higher levels of inflammatory markers, although a causal relationship is not established. Immunologic dysfunction in gut-associated lymphoid tissue leading to microbial translocation may account for peripheral T-cell activation and impaired immune recovery in some patients responding virologically to ART. Two important studies suggest measuring soluble TNF-alpha receptors has potential predictive value to assess risk of AIDS-related and non-AIDS-related events in patients treated with ART, but further work is needed to understand how these measurements can affect clinical practice.



Various approaches to modulating immune activation and inflammation are being explored in animal models of AIDS and pilot clinical trials. Low dose ASA demonstrated many potentially beneficial effects on inflammation and coagulation in a short-term trial. Larger, longer-term studies are warranted to assess the persistence and magnitude of these effects and to assess unique safety issues that present in an HIV-infected population on ART. Adding the immunomodulatory ARV MVC to standard ART appears to improve some aspects of immune function and deserves further study. IL-21 and rifaxamin/sulfasalazine have favorable effects on systemic inflammation and mucosal immunity when used in animal models of acute SIV infection, before immunologic damage to gut-associated lymphoid tissue is severe. They will need to be studied in chronic infection to see if similar effects can be achieved. IL-7 therapy could correct a key immunologic defect that impairs reconstitution of T-cells in lymph nodes and has shown potential benefits in early human trials. SBI may improve symptoms of HIV enteropathy but does not appear promising as a treatment for chronic immune activation associated with GI tract immunologic dysfunction. Initiation of ART in early HIV may normalize immune activation without any other adjunctive therapy. Future studies should establish how late in HIV infection ART can be started and still achieve normalization, the durability of the response, the effect on other biomarkers of inflammation, and assess if restoration of intestinal immune function is adequate.



skydrake
Messaggi: 9925
Iscritto il: sabato 19 marzo 2011, 1:18

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da skydrake » martedì 21 agosto 2012, 6:47

Non so se questa notizia era sfuggita:

L'inibitore dell'integrase S/GSK-574, in studio in fase II da parte della Shionogi- Viiv Healthcare (joint venture fra GlaxoSmithKline e Pfizer), attualmente in fase II, ha dimostrato un'emivita da 21 a 50 giorni per singola iniezione suggerendo che sia possibile una inizione mensile o addiritura meno frequente

abstract:
http://pag.aids2010.org/Abstracts.aspx?AID=14960

Articolo divultativo:
http://www.hivandhepatitis.com/hiv-aids ... ?ic=700100



cesar78
Messaggi: 360
Iscritto il: mercoledì 11 luglio 2012, 9:14

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da cesar78 » martedì 21 agosto 2012, 13:07




Dora
Messaggi: 7493
Iscritto il: martedì 7 luglio 2009, 10:48

Re: [AIDS 2012] 19° International AIDS Conference

Messaggio da Dora » venerdì 31 agosto 2012, 16:04

Mi sono accorta soltanto adesso che tutte le sessioni dei diversi “percorsi” del congresso sono state riassunte da un team di relatori e possono essere visualizzate a questo indirizzo.
Quelli che seguono sono i report che ho trovato particolarmente interessanti:



  • - MOAA02, Immune Function and Dysfunction


The degree of immune dysfunction during HIV infection shows considerable inter-individual variability. CD4 T cells, which are the main target for HIV infection, were tested against three peptides. HIV controllers were found to have highly efficient Th1 effectors, which may contribute to viral control.

It is known that SIV/HIV can infect macrophages, but the role of macrophages as HIV/SIV reservoir has not being determined. The study suggested that macrophages may be an important reservoir for SIV, hence difficulties for specific CD8+ T cells to fully suppress viral replication.

Highly exposed seronegative (HESN) are individuals who remain uninfected even after repeated exposure to HIV. Natural Killer (NK) cells are known to play a key role in immune response against viral infection by recognizing and killing infected cells. In depth assessment of HIV-specific NK responses in HESN was performed. In a subset of the HESN study population, NK cells exhibit HIV-1 specific responses. Whether those merely reflect exposure to HIV-1 antigens or are actually involved in protection against HIV acquisition remain to be determined.

Immune control in HIV-infected individuals able to maintain low viremia in absence of antiretroviral therapy (controllers) notably consists in CD8+ T cell responses to HIV core antigens, encoded by Gag, restricted by 'protective' HLA-B alleles. Slow progression can also be associated with antibodies against HIV core proteins, but mechanisms are unclear. A number of cytokines implicated in isotype switching were investigated. An isotype switched IgG antibody response to HIV core antigens associated with better control of HIV infection in patients without known protective HLA-B alleles.

IL-7 plays an important role in T-cell survival, homeostasis and function. Given the importance of IL-7 in HIV pathogenesis, there is need to understand how does IL-7 regulate the expression of its own receptor CD127. The study showed that IL-7 suppresses CD127 gene transcription in human CD8 T-cells, resulting in dysregulation of the IL-7 signaling cascade in HIV infection.


  • - MOSY06, Immunopathogenesis and its Treatment


The Session on Immunopathogenesis and its Treatment was an exciting review of the state of our current understanding of the impact of inflammation on accelerated incidence of cardiovascular disease, etc. Dr. Steve Deeks led off the session with a comprehensive overview of our increasing understanding of the link between emerging inflammatory markers that are tightly linked to HIV associated immunopathology including: cellular activation (first proposed by Dr. Giorgie nearly 2 decades ago), serum markers (IL-6, d-dimers, etc), microbial bi-products (LPS, etc), and tissue based alterations (fibrosis, etc). Most interestingly, these markers persist at remarkably high levels despite durable suppression of viral replication by ART, suggesting irreparable damage has occurred within the immune system that results in persistent inflammatory cues that may continue to drive immunopathology in the absence of high level viremia. Importantly, early treatment resulted in a significant reduction in inflammatory markers, implicating early immunopathological events in driving this aberrant persistent underlying inflammation that may be centrally responsible for increased morbidities in HIV-infected individuals on therapy.

This presentation was then followed by a more mechanistic evaluation of interventions that have sought to dampen and/or eliminate inflammation including ART intensification, anti-inflammatories, and non-absorbable antibiotics by Dr. Netanya Sandler.

Dr. Tim Schacker then followed up with a fascinating glimpse into the potential role of inflammation associated tissue fibrosis in the etiology of HIV disease progression. Interestingly, Dr. Schacker showed data that baseline levels of inflammation driven tissue fibrosis are higher in Ugandan healthy populations associated with reduced CD4+ T cell numbers, strongly implicating fibrosis as a central driver of CD4+ T cell loss, likely due to the loss of IL-7 secreted cells.

This presentation was then followed by a critical review of the cytokine based therapeutic interventions, by Dr. Yves Levy, pointing to an improved therapeutic outcome with IL-7 over IL-2 centrally related to the target T cell populations modulated by these cytokines. Fundamentally, IL-2 expanded T-regs, likely counterproductive to anti-HIV activities, whereas IL-7 expanded T cell populations more broadly, capable of controlling HIV infected cells.

Finally, Dr. Lydie Trautmann showed some new data on T cell functional difference between subjects off and on therapy, suggesting that while the T cell responses are abundant during uncontrolled infection, they functional "quality" is inferior to T cells in treated patients that may be less abundant. Therefore she proposed that boosting the frequency of high "quality" T cell responses during suppressive therapy may promote more effective control of viremia post therapy discontinuation.


  • - TUAA03, Novel Drugs and Treatment Strategies


The search for novel HIV drugs and treatment strategies that can be used for prophylactic or therapeutic purposes in humans is ongoing. Ledgins are a novel class of inhibitors targeting HIV integrase, hence capable of blocking HIV replication, that could be used in combined HIV therapy.

Viral DNA integration into the host genome is a critical step in viral replication; even if anti-integrase drugs now exist, no therapetics have been able to reverse integration so far. The Max Plank Institute has developed Tre-recombinase that effectively excises HIV-1 proviral DNA from infected human cell cultures. These data suggest that Tre-recombinase may become a novel drug for antiretroviral therapy.

HIV specific CTL responses are critical in controlling viral replication, hence there is a need to enhance these responses to suppress and clear the virus. The positive preliminary results of a cell based therapeutic strategy that enhances CTL to eradicate the virus suggests that stem cell based gene therapy is a realistic approach.

Compromised mucosal integrity is involved in chronic immune activation, and HIV enteropathy persists despite ART. SBI has been shown to improve GI function and GALT CD4+ T cells. Th17 have been shown to be critical for mucosal immune function. The potential of IL22, which regulated IL17, should be explored as a potential immune modulator.


  • - TUAA02, Mechanism of HIV Latency


The theme of this session was the study of mechanisms underlying maintenance of latency in HIV-infected cells. Dr. Lachlan Gray (Burnet Institute) discussed mechanisms controlling HIV latency that are specific to the central nervous system. He found decreased transcriptional activity of HIV within CNS, which was associated with expression of the transcriptional repressor Sp3, in contrast to Sp1 which is a more canonical binder to the HIV LTR.

Dr. Fabio Romerio (University of Maryland) performed transcriptional analysis using an in vitro model of latent HIV infection of peripheral blood CD4 T cells. Several transcriptional differences were found between uninfected cells and cells latently HIV infected. These differences suggested that HIV may exploit cellular suppression functions to maintain latency.

Dr. Mudit Tyagi (George Mason University) discussed induction and maintenance of latency in HIV-infected primary CD4 T cells and transformed cell lines by recruitment of PcG repressor to the locus of HIV integration. Dr. Tyagi found that CBF-1 can induce repressive chromatin structure by recruiting Polycomb Group corepressors to the HIV LTR.

Dr. Stefanie Weber (Erlangen University) discussed epigenetic modifications which occur to the HIV LTR and unexpectedly found LTR-located CpG dinucleotides being mutated. These specific LTR mutations were speculated to be targets of therapeutic interventions.

Dr. Suha Saleh (Monash University) discussed unique integration site patterns in peripheral blood CD4 T cells experimentally infected with HIV. Dr. Saleh found that integration sites of HIV were influenced by the mechanisms by which the CD4 T cells were stimulated, but HIV tended to integrate in transcriptionally active genes. Following the presentations discussion noted that further studies might focus on understanding HIV latency in vivo, but the difficulty in retrieving sufficient latently-infected cells from in vivo reservoirs was mentioned.


  • - TUPL01, Challenges and Solutions


Dr. Javier Martinez-Picado, a leader in the field of HIV reservoirs and cure, presented a comprehensive review of the state of the field. Despite major advances in the number of therapeutics available for the chronic suppression of HIV, patients living on ART exhibit increased mortality and risk to development of a number of chronic inflammatory conditions such as bone loss, cardiovascular complications, etc., likely related to viral persistence, and transient re-emergence from viral reservoirs.
These viral reservoirs persist in many forms including resting CD4+ T cells that are not actively replicating, and therefore maintaining the virus in a latent form, as well as in long lived immune cells such as macrophages and dendritic cells, that both once in a while may become active and allow for the emergence of transient blips of virus that drive chronic inflammatory responses.
Thus efforts aimed at eliminating the viral reservoir permanently may have critical health implications on the world’s HIV-infected patient population, and important health economic benefits. Central to “curing” HIV is the identification of the methodologies to monitor viral replication below the current limits of detection, the definition of the long lived viral reservoirs, mechanisms by which to reactivate these cells, and to define the mechanism of viral latency.
Importantly, it is thought that viral replication may continue unabated in tissues (lymph nodes, gut, etc), either due to low drug penetration or due to the presence of large numbers of infected cells.
So the fundamental question pertains to the identification of how the virus may be resurrected from viral reservoirs, marking infected cells, that can then be actively eliminated. Interestingly, viral latency is maintained by modifications to the viral genome in DNA form, either due histone acetylation, that locks the viral genome in a poorly accessible structure that cannot be transcribed. However, many new therapeutics have been identified that are able to “unlock” this conformational DNA change, allowing the cells transcriptional machinery access to the viral genome.
These compounds are called histone deacetylases (HDAC inhibitors), and 2 trials, one in the US and one in Australia, have now been conducted using these compounds in ART treated patients.
Preliminary data from US shows a 5-fold increase in HIV expression after treatment, without side effects, strongly suggesting that the reservoirs can be resurrected.
In addition, cytokine based and disulfiram based purging mechanisms are being explored as alternate mechanisms of bringing the virus out of latency.
Now interventions aimed at inducing immunity, through vaccination, will be needed to eliminate these cells, that together with reservoir purging will have great promise to finally purging the reservoir.
Finally, the first evidence of a “cure” was observed in the “Berlin patient” that received a bone marrow transplant with a CCR4-delta32 donor cells following myoablative therapy. The patient has maintain undetectable viral loads, suggesting that removing the HIV co-receptor on target cells may provide a means by which to prevent viral propagation in vitro.
New cost-effective strategies using zinc-finger gene therapeutic directed mutagenesis are now being explored to direct this type of modification to hematopoietic cells to try to recapitulate this protective “cure” as a potential novel means by which to beat the virus.
Thus, together these approaches offer a road-map towards an HIV cure, offering new hope for all those infected with HIV globally.


  • - WEAX01, The Future of Genomics in HIV Medicine


To start the genomics session, Francis Collins shared his thoughts on the future of genomics in HIV medicine. Knowledge of human genetic variation has already has already been successfully applied in the HIV field, most notably in pharmacogenetics. From the resistance phenotype conferred by CCR5 Δ32, a drug has been created, a patient has been cured, and gene therapy is being developed. Emerging large-scale technologies will accelerate the use of genomic tools to address challenges in HIV vaccine development, and in many other areas of HIV research.

Sumit Chandra then presented a global overview of systems biology approaches to HIV. To take advantage of the current proliferation of “omics” technologies, it is necessary to figure out how they interact, to use mathematical modeling to understand how the pieces fit together and to detect emerging properties. The idea is thus to combine the multiple genome-wide studies performed in recent years in HIV in order to create a big HIV-host interaction network, and then to go from static models to prediction of disease outcome. Derived approaches can be used for systems vaccinology (prediction of immunological signatures, testing, modeling, and iterative improvement of vaccine design).

Fred Bushman described a systems approach to innate immune defense against HIV, starting with a description of known HIV restriction factors (APOBECs, TRIM5, BST2 and SAMHD1), and presenting then his plan to uncover additional factors, by combining information on HIV-host protein interaction and on genome-wide siRNA screens. He finished with an invitation to play with the enormous amount of data that is being generated – crowdsourcing discovery: http://microb32.med.upenn.edu/.

Finally, Philip Tarr gave a clinician perspective on HIV genomics: he described a few well-established pharmacogenetic markers, before providing into a more global assessment of the potential of genomics to predict non-HIV-related complications like diabetes and coronary artery disease. Genomic technology, and in particular sequencing, holds enormous potential for researchers, clinicians and patients, even if challenges are considerable.


  • - WEAA02, HIV/SIV Pathogenesis


The theme of this session was the discussion of emerging immunological dysfunctions in progressively HIV-infected humans and SIV-infected Asian macaques compared to naturally SIV-infected natural hosts. Dr. Ivona Pandrea (University of Pittsburg) discussed a novel therapeutic intervention to decrease microbial translocation-induced immune activation. She infected pigtail macaques with SIVagm and observed significant microbial translocation, cardiovascular disease, and immune activation in these animals. She then treated a subset of these SIVagm-infected pigtail macaques with rifaximin and sulfasalazine and noted that the treated animals had significantly reduced microbial translocation, inflammation and viral replication.

Ms. Carol Vinton (NIAID, NIH) discussed cellular substrates for infection in natural hosts for SIV compared to nonnatural hosts for SIV. She found that lymph node resident and circulating peripheral blood CD4 T cell subsets were differentially targeted by SIV in naturally SIV-infected sooty mangabeys compared to progressively SIV-infected Asian macaques.

Dr. Ann Chahroudi (Emory University) discussed how low numbers of target cells for SIV in young sooty mangabeys may limit vertical transmission in that natural host. She found very low frequencies of CCR5+ proliferating CD4 T cells in the mucosa of infant sooty mangabeys, potentially explaining the low incidence of vertical transmission in natural hosts for SIV.

Dr. Gilad Doitsh (Gladstone Institute) discussed how depletion of CD4 T cells in HIV-infected individuals may be, in part, attributed to activation of infected CD4 T cells. He used in vitro infection of lymph node cultures and showed that the majority of HIV-infected cells are abortively HIV infected and that their death was attributed to activation-induced pyroptosis instead of direct virus-mediated killing and that this activation-induced death could be blocked by the FDA approved drug glimepiride.

Mr. Feras Al-Ghazawi (University of Ottowa) discussed how IL-7 signalling may lead to a feedback inhibition of future IL-7 signals. He found IL-7 induced expression of SOCS1-3 and significant down-regulation of the IL-7 receptor CD127. He then showed by coimmunoprecipitation that SOCS proteins may lead directly to down-regulation of CD127.


  • - WEAA01, Natural and Vaccine Induced Immunities


The session on Natural and Vaccine Induced Immunity reviewed 5 novel studies aimed at defining both mechanism by which natural immunity is generated as well as new approaches at inducing such immune responses to provide protection in macaques through vaccination. The session was led off by a study that aimed at recapitulating the RV144 vaccine trial results in the macaque model. Results from the study identically replicated human data, showing protection in 27% of animals, no post acquisition viral load effect, high levels of binding antibodies, CD4 T cell proliferative an cytokine secreting cells.

Building on these results, transcriptional profiling data were performed to gain in depth insights into the potential mechanisms of protection from infection among vaccinated animals. Results suggest that ALVAC induced signatures were associated with strong interferon-regulated genes, whereas alum co-administration modified vaccine induced boosting exhibiting a dampened immune profile marked by increased Caspase-1 expression, BCR activation, and IRF3 activation.

Similarly, in the fourth talk in the session, mucosal vaccination with an HPV pseudotyped vector was performed, which aimed at boosting ALVAC protection.

Results from these studies recapitulated those observed with ALVAC alone, suggesting that HPV-pseudotyped mucosal vaccination was not able to further boost the protective efficacy of ALVAC+protein.

The second talk in the session summarized a third novel vaccine strategy that aimed at inducing immune responses targeting vulnerable regions within the cleavage region of the HIV protein Gag, highly conserved across global viral variants. Vaccinated animals exhibited a more rapid decline of viral replication post acute infection, and increased CD4+ T cell counts, suggesting a protective effect of the vaccine.

Following on these results, the third talk in the session reviewed a remarkable effort at characterizing the protective characteristics of neutralizing antibody sera from clade C infected populations in India. These humoral immune responses were associated with a significant immunodominant shift towards increased V3 targeting, related to persistent viral load levels. These V3-specific antibodies were cross-reactive, and targeted epitopes exposed on the crown region of the intact virus, suggesting an interesting immunofocused antibody response in this population of clade C infected patients.

Finally, building on these interesting humoral immune responses, the final talk in the session summarized results from a study aimed at defining the role of naturally induced antibodies targeting a vulnerable region on the V2-loop of the HIV envelope protein, involved in binding to the newest HIV co-receptor, alpha4-beta7. Interestingly, these antibodies may be relevant to antiviral control by binding to unique signature sequences located within the V2 loop, but they can also be observed in other regions of the envelope protein, and mutagenic analyses demonstrate the clear cooperative activity of multiple alpha4-beta7 binding sites, offering a novel mechanism by which V2-specific antibodies may have provided protection from infection in the RV144 vaccine trial.


  • - THPDA02, Infection, Replication and Evasion


The session ‘Infection, Replication and Evasion’ was moderated by Scott Kitchen, and Ronald Swanstrom, who could be the delegate who asked the most questions at Track A sessions :-). The ‘rock star’ status of Timothy Brown, aka the ‘Berlin patient’ who is the first person functionally cured of HIV, meant that the room was too small to accommodate everyone.

J. Symons (Utrecht) asked why did X4-variants pre-existing in the Berlin patient’s blood did not emerge after the allogeneic CCR5Δ32 transplant? Before transplantation, CXCR4-tropic viruses represented nearly 3% of the viral population sequenced from his plasma. Surprisingly, the CXCR4-tropic viruses depended on CCR5 for replication, and they could not replicate it in CCR5Δ32 PBMCs isolated post-transplantation.

The next talk showed that ectopic expression of CCR5Δ32 could have negative consequences. L. Chang (U. Florida) created a CCR5Δ32 gene to interfere with the function of native CCR5 and CXCR4. However, the ectopic expression of CCR5Δ32 was highly cytotoxic (driving uncontrollable intracellular T cell signaling), suggesting that the approach may not be applicable as a high ratio of CCR5Δ32 would likely be needed to interfere with native receptors. In addition, they showed that three miRNA were effective at inhibiting HIV-1.

Looking at the impact of receptor tropism on reservoir, T. Ruel (UCSF) showed preliminary data from four children with dual CCR5/ CXCR4 viruses and eight with CCR5 viruses that suggested that children with CXCR4 viruses might present larger reservoirs.

M. De Pasquale (Vanderbilt U.) looked at the role of APOBEC3G in vivo. Cells from untreated long term non-progressors had higher levels of APOBEC3G RNA, and the level of APOBEC3G was inversely associated with infectivity of HIV produced from resting CD4+ T memory cells stimulated ex vivo.

The Basic Science track is also open to computer scientists: D. Sargeant (U. Nevada) introduced ‘HIVToolbox’, a website that integrates tools to investigate HIV sequence, structure and function data. Check the website at: http://hivtoolbox.bio-toolkit.com/


  • - THSY03, HIV Persistence and Eradication


The theme of this session was the discussion of mechanisms underlying HIV persistence and novel therapeutic interventions. Dr. Vincent Planelles (University of Utah) discussed memory CD4 T cells as a main source of latent HIV. He presented a model of in vitro differentiation of naïve CD4 T cells into different subsets of memory CD4 T cells with concomitant HIV infection with single cycle virus. Using this model he showed that limiting amounts of cyclin T and phosphorylation of CDK9 decreases HIV transcription in unstimulated memory and naïve CD4 T cells. He was able to use this model to screen putative therapeutics to drive HIV from latent pools.

Dr. Benjamin Berkout (University of Amsterdam) used a cell line model of latency to sequence small RNAs and unexpectedly found antisense strand HIV sequences which could result in double stranded RNA species which decrease HIV transcription. He then discussed in vitro activation of CD4 T cells with immature dendtric cells as a method to drive HIV from latency. This induction of HIV replication from latency involved both cell to cell interactions and soluble factors produced by the dendritic cells.

Dr. Jerome Zack (UCLA) discussed methods to activate and eliminate latent HIV reservoirs. He used prostratin or byrostatin as therapies to purge HIV from latency. Using an innovative approach of nanoparticle delivery of these compounds to CD4 T cells, he was able to selectively activate CD4 T cells to increase HIV transcription in vitro. He was able to synthesize cost effective analogs of prostratin and byrostatin which more efficiently increased HIV transcription.

Dr. Monsef Benkirane (CNRS) discussed a role for SAMHD1 in the immunopathogenesis and replication of HIV. Even though it is believed that SAMHD1 is thought to restrict HIV predominantly in myeloid cells, he presented data suggesting that SAMHD1 function is also present in resting CD4 T cells and can reduce HIV infection. Introduction of the accessory protein Vpx in trans led to enhanced HIV infection of quiescent CD4 T cells. The French minister of higher education and research closed the session. Geneviève Fioraso discussed the French commitment to HIV research and announced a signed agreement between ANRS and the NIH to increase collaborative research effort.


  • - THAA01, HIV Reservoirs: Where and How is the Virus Hiding?


The HIV viral reservoirs session was an exciting session highlighting 5 novel studies aimed at defining the kinetics of reservoir establishment, the activity of the reservoir under suppressive therapy, as well as novel strategies that could potentially functionally cure patients. The session began with a talk by Dr. Henrichs, who presented the first data demonstrating persistent viral suppression in 2 HIV+ patients undergoing hematopoetic stem cell transplantation on continued antiviral therapy. The 2 patients exhibited undetectable viremia and decaying anti-HIV antibody responses following complete reconstitution of CD4+ T cells by the graft.

Dr. Ambrose then presented data on the kinetics and properties of the viral reservoir in SIV infection using the rhesus macaque model. Interestingly, while proviral DNA was identified in all tissues sampled in untreated and treated macaques, proviral RNA was only detected in untreated macaques. Tissue viral loads were strongly associated early viral replication, suggesting that the viral reservoir is seeded extremely early in infection.

The third presentation in the session, by Dr. Bacchus, highlighted data from the VISCONTI trial aimed at understanding the mechanism by which viral control induced by early scheduled treatment interruption may alter the viral reservoir, allowing for durable control of viremia. Interestingly, post-treatment control (PTC) was associated with a unique viral reservoir profile, with a majority of transitional memory cells (>50%) and only a minor amount of naive and central memory CD4+ T (the later cells are typical of the reservoir in natural elite controllers). The reservoir in PTC patients was fully inducible, suggesting that treatment induced control is marked by a low reservoir size, in unique CD4+ T cell subsets, likely due to early treatment.

The fourth talk, presented by Dr. Apetrei, highlighted an exciting non-human model in which eradication may be investigated in the setting of an active immune system. African green monkeys (AGM) represent a unique model in which viral control is established soon after infection. CD8+ T cell depletion results in a rapid viral rebound that Dr. Apetrei's team was now able to show is composed of infectious virus. These data highlight that AGM may represent a unique opportunity to examine immune mechanisms by which a functional cure may be achieved in vivo.

Finally, the last presentation in the session, by Ms. Josefsson, described a comprehensive investigation of the viral dynamics of the viral reservoir in long-term treated patients either treated in acute (<6months) or chronic (>1.5years) viral infection. The data clearly demonstrated little viral evolution in blood and tissues (gut associated lymphoid tissue, bone marrow, or lymph nodes) on therapy, irrespective of length of untreated infection, despite greater viral diversification in patients treated later in infection, highlighting the stability of the viral reservoir on therapy.



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