| Literature DB >> 26253002 |
Charles W Dobard1, Sunita Sharma2, Mian-Er Cong3, Rolieria West4, Natalia Makarova5, Angela Holder6, Chou-Pong Pau7, Debra L Hanson8, Francis J Novembre9, Jose Gerardo Garcia-Lerma10, Walid Heneine11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Topically delivered tenofovir (TFV) from intravaginal rings, tablets, or gels is being evaluated for HIV prevention. We previously demonstrated that TFV delivered vaginally by gel protected macaques from vaginal infection with SHIV. Here we investigated efficacy of the TFV gel against vaginal transmission of a TFV-resistant SHIV containing the K65R mutation (SHIV162P3K65R) and its relationship to drug levels in vaginal tissues.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26253002 PMCID: PMC4528693 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-015-0195-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Fig. 1Efficacy of TFV gel against SHIV162P3K65R. a Survival curves representing the cumulative percentage of uninfected macaques as a function of the number of challenges. After 20 SHIV162P3K65R exposures, challenges were stopped and animals were monitored for ten additional weeks for infection in the follow-up period. b Breakthrough infections show no evidence of blunted viremia. Individual virus load kinetics of controls (black lines) and breakthrough infection (red line) under continued twice-weekly gel dosing. Time zero indicates the time of first SHIV RNA detection in plasma. Time zero indicates the time of first SHIV RNA detection in plasma. The dashed line denotes the limit of quantification of the virus load assay (50 copies/ml).
Fig. 2Systemic drug exposure following vaginal TFV gel dosing. a Cumulative plasma TFV levels in macaques following twice-weekly dosing over the 10 week challenge period. b Longitudinal assessment of individual plasma TFV levels in macaques at time of each SHIV challenge (30 min post gel dosing). TFV concentrations (LLOD = 3 ng/ml) are shown in black and red for uninfected and infected macaques, respectively. Shaded gray bar indicates estimated time of infection.