| Literature DB >> 28851294 |
Kristian Thorlund1, Marc S Horwitz2, Brian T Fife3, Richard Lester4, D William Cameron5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current antiretroviral therapy (ART) used to treat human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) patients is life-long because it only suppresses de novo infections. Recent efforts to eliminate HIV have tested the ability of a number of agents to reactivate ('Kick') the well-known latent reservoir. This approach is rooted in the assumption that once these cells are reactivated the host's immune system itself will eliminate ('Kill') the virus. While many agents have been shown to reactivate large quantities of the latent reservoir, the impact on the size of the latent reservoir has been negligible. This suggests that the immune system is not sufficient to eliminate reactivated reservoirs. Thus, there is a need for more emphasis on 'kill' strategies in HIV cure research, and how these might work in combination with current or future kick strategies.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28851294 PMCID: PMC5576299 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2683-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Overview of ‘kick’ studies in humans completed to date
| Study | Drug Studied | Patient Eligibility | No. Pts | Study Design | Tx Dose and Duration | Length of Study | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agents targeting cellular transcription factors | |||||||
| Lehrmann 2005 | Valproic Acid (HDACi) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 2 years | 4 | Proof-of-concept | 500-750 mg bid for 3 months | 18 weeks | 68%–83% reduction in resting infected CD4 T-cells in 3 of 4 patients |
| Sagot-Lerolle et al. 2008 | Valproic Acid (HDACi) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 2 year | 24 | Retrospective matched cohort study (pilot) | Not reported (retrospective) | 2 years | No difference in viral DNA quantified in PBMCs |
| Archin 2010 | Valproic Acid (HDACi) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 6 months; healthy CD4 T-cells >300/μL | 12 | Single arm phase 1 trial | 1000 mg qd (Depakote ER) | 16 weeks | No sustained depletion of resting CD4+ T-cell infection observed |
| Routy et al. 2012 | Valproic Acid (HDACi) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 1 year; healthy CD4 T-cells >200/μL | 56 | Multicenter randomized cross-over trial | Up to 500 mg bid (as per tolerance) | 16 weeks (× 2) | No reduction in CD4 T-cells with replication-competent HIV |
| Elliot et al. 2014 | Vorinostat (HDACi) | Not reported Baseline CD4 T-cell count range from 371 to 1136 | 20 | Proof-of-concept single arm | 400 mg bid for 14 days | 12 weeks | Cell-associated unspliced RNA Increased by 7.4 fold at 14 days |
| Archin et al. 2013 | Vorinostat (HDACi) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 6 months; healthy CD4 T-cells >300/μL | 11 | Proof-of-concept single arm | 200 mg initially 400 mg after 2–3 and 4–5 weeks | 5 weeks | RNA expr. in resting CD4+ T-cells increased 4.8 fold (1.5–10) |
| Rasmussen et al. 2014 | Panobinostat (HDACi) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 2 years; healthy CD4 T-cells >500/μL | 15 | Phase 1/2 | 20 mg three times/week for 8 weeks | 32 weeks | Cell-associated RNA Increased during treatment by 3.5 fold |
| Soegaard 2015 | Romidepsin | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 2 years; healthy CD4 T-cells >500/μL | 6 | Proof-of-concept phase II | One 4 h 50 mg infusion per week for 3 weeks | 70 days after last infusion | Plasma RNA increased to detectable levels in 5/6 patients |
| Katlama 2016 | IL-7 agonist Raltegravir Maraviroc | Viral RNA < 200cp/mL last 3 years, <50cp/mL last 6 months, CD4 T-cells >350/μL | 29 | Randomized trial | 8 weeks of RAL + MAR intensification, then 3 x weekly 30mcg/kg of IL-7 | 28 weeks | Data safety monitoring board stopped trial at 28 weeks due to concerns of >1500 CD4+ T-cell counts |
| Levy Y 2012 | IL-7 recombinant | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 6 months; healthy CD4 T-cells: 100–400/μL | 32 | Randomized trial | weekly 10, 20, or 30mcg/kg for 3 weeks | 52 weeks | IL-7 well tolerated up to 20mcg/kg. Brisk increase in CD4 count. |
| Sereti 2009 | IL-7 recombinant | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL (grp 1) Viral RNA < 50,000cp/mL (grp 2) for at least 12 months; healthy CD4 T-cells > 100/μL | 25 | Randomized double blind | Single dose of 3, 10, 30, 60 or 100μg/kg | 8 weeks | 30μg/kg max tolerable dose. Significant increase in transient HIV-RNA in 6 patients. Increase in central memory phenotype T-cells |
| Vibholm 2017 | TLR-9 agonist (MGN1703) | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 12 months; healthy CD4 T-cells >350/μL | 15 | Phase 1/2a Single arm | 60 mg MGN1703 subcutaneously twice weekly for 4 weeks | 4 weeks (80 days follow-up) | Pronounced activation of plasmacytoid dendritic cells. Significant increase in proportions of activated cytotoxic NK cells and CD8+ T cells |
| Epigenetic modulation agents | |||||||
| Elliott et al. 2015 | Disulfram | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 3 years; healthy CD4 T-cells >350/μL | 30 | Non-randomized prospective dose-escalation | Three days of 500 mg, 1000 mg, or 2000 mg | 30 days | Approximately 2-fold increase in cell-associated RNA |
| Spivak et al. 2014 | Disulfram | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for min 1 year; healthy CD4 T-cells >500/mcg for min 24 weeks | 16 | Pilot single arm | 500 mg/day for 14 days | 84 days | Well-tolerated, but latent reservoir did not change in size |
| Gutiérrez et al. 2016 | Bryostatin-1 | Viral RNA < 50cp/mL for at least 2 years; healthy CD4 T-cells >350/μL | 12 | Double-blind randomized phase I trial | Placebo 10mcg/mm2 20mcg/mm2 | 672 days | No detectable difference in cell-associated unspliced RNA |
Fig. 1Representation of ability broadly neutralizing antibody to (a) bind to multiple variants of gp120; (b) induce killing of the HIV infected cell by attraction of natural killer cells (left), macrophages (middle) and complement (right)
Fig. 2Assembly of BiTEs from two different variable regions of monoclonal antibodies and their mechanism of action. The BiTE first attaches to a CD8+ T cell before assisting the CD8+ T cell in binding to an HIV infected CD4+ T cell. Upon binding the CD4+ T cell the CD8+ T cell will release granzymes and induce death of the HIV infected CD4+ T cell
Fig. 3Assembly of a CAR engineered CD8+ T-cell its mechanism of action. The CAR engineered CD8+ T cell binds to an HIV infected CD4+ T cell. Upon binding the CD4+ T cell the CAR engineered CD8+ T cell will release granzymes and induce death of the HIV infected CD4+ T cell