| Literature DB >> 22811299 |
Upal Roy1, JoEllyn McMillan, Yazen Alnouti, Nagsen Gautum, Nathan Smith, Shantanu Balkundi, Prasanta Dash, Santhi Gorantla, Andrea Martinez-Skinner, Jane Meza, Georgette Kanmogne, Susan Swindells, Samuel M Cohen, R Lee Mosley, Larisa Poluektova, Howard E Gendelman.
Abstract
Lack of adherence, inaccessibility to viral reservoirs, long-term drug toxicities, and treatment failures are limitations of current antiretroviral therapy (ART). These limitations lead to increased viral loads, medicine resistance, immunocompromise, and comorbid conditions. To this end, we developed long-acting nanoformulated ART (nanoART) through modifications of existing atazanavir, ritonavir, and efavirenz suspensions in order to establish cell and tissue drug depots to achieve sustained antiretroviral responses. NanoART's abilities to affect immune and antiviral responses, before or following human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection were tested in nonobese severe combined immune-deficient mice reconstituted with human peripheral blood lymphocytes. Weekly subcutaneous injections of drug nanoformulations at doses from 80 mg/kg to 250 mg/kg, 1 day before and/or 1 and 7 days after viral exposure, elicited drug levels that paralleled the human median effective concentration, and with limited toxicities. NanoART treatment attenuated viral replication and preserved CD4(+) Tcell numbers beyond that seen with orally administered native drugs. These investigations bring us one step closer toward using long-acting antiretrovirals in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22811299 PMCID: PMC3570176 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jis395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226