| Literature DB >> 29268753 |
Nicholas J Norton1, Axel Fun1, Mikaila Bandara1, Mark R Wills1, Hoi Ping Mok2, Andrew M L Lever3,4.
Abstract
A robust measure of the size of the latent HIV reservoir is essential to quantifying the effect of interventions designed to deplete the pool of reactivatable, replication competent proviruses. In addition to the ability to measure a biologically relevant parameter, any assay designed to be used in a clinical trial needs to be reproducible and scalable. The need to quantify the number of resting CD4+ T cells capable of releasing infectious virus has led to the development of the quantitative viral outgrowth assay (VOA). The assay as originally described has a number of features that limit its scalability for use in clinical trials; however recent developments reducing the time and manpower requirements of the assay, while importantly improving reproducibility mean that it is becoming much more practical for it to enter into more widespread use. This review describes the background to VOA development and the practical issues that they present in utilising them in clinical trials. It describes the innovations that have made their usage more practical and the limitations that still exist.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Latency; Viral outgrowth assay
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29268753 PMCID: PMC5740843 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-017-0381-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Fig. 1a HIV infected SupT1-CCR5 cells form syncytia which can be readily discerned by microscopy. b The results of VOA using observed cytopathic effect (CPE) as readouts strongly correlate with that using p24 ELISA
Examples of clinical trials using VOA
| Clinical trial no. | Intervention | Key finding | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01319383 | Vorinostat (single dose) 8 patients | Single dose of vorinostat increased cell-associated RNA in resting CD4 cells but no reduction in IUPM | [ |
| NCT01319383 | Vorinostat (multiple doses 3 ×/week for 8 weeks) 5 patients | Increase in cell-associated RNA with multiple doses compared to single dose of vorinostat in 3/5 patients, no reduction in IUPM | [ |
| NCT01319383 | Vorinostat (multiple doses) 16 patients | Multiple doses of vorinostat increased cell-associated RNA in resting CD4 cells but no reduction in IUPM | [ |
| NCT01680094 | Panobinostat 15 patients | Increase in cell-associated RNA, increase in plasma viraemia, no significant reduction in total and integrated DNA or IUPM. No delay in time to rebound in the 9 patients undergoing planned treatment interruption. | [ |
| NCT00289952 | Valproic acid and ART 56 patients | No reduction in IUPM | [ |
| NCT01286259 | Disulfiram 16 patients | Transient increase in plasma viraemia in a subset of patients, no overall change in plasma viraemia in the entire cohort, no change in IUPM | [ |
| NCT02443935 | MGN1703 15 patients | Significant reduction in cell-associated RNA post-treatment, transient increase in plasma viraemia in 6/15 patients. No change in total or integrated HIV DNA, also no change in IUPM | [ |
| NCT02092116 | Romidepsin, Vacc-4x and rhuGM-CSF 20 patients (17 completed trial) | Significant decrease (40%) in total DNA (in 16 patients measurable), non-significant decrease (19%) in integrated DNA (15 patients measurable) significant reduction (38%) in IUPM (6 patients measurable). No delay in time to rebound in the 15 patients who have undergone post treatment interruption | [ |
| NCT02336074 RIVER | ART, Raltegravir, Vorinostat, ChAdV63.HIVconsv and MVA.HIVconsv | Ongoing | |
| NCT02707900 VORVAX | Vorinostat and AGS-004 | Ongoing | |
| NCT02471430 | Panobinostat and Pegylated Interferon-alpha2a | Ongoing | |
| NCT02408861 | Nivolumab and Ipilimumab | Ongoing |
IUPM infectious units per million cells as measured by VOA