| Literature DB >> 30007411 |
William Schreiber-Stainthorp1, Sanhita Sinharay1, Sharat Srinivasula2, Swati Shah1, Jing Wang2, Lori Dodd3, H Clifford Lane4, Michele Di Mascio3, Dima A Hammoud5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although rates of severe HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders have declined in the post-antiretroviral treatment (ART) era, subtle deficits persist, possibly exacerbated by treatment non-adherence. The actual effects of ART interruption/initiation on brain glucose metabolism as a reflection of viral replication and neuroinflammation remain unclear. Our study investigates how treatment initiation and interruption alter brain glucose metabolism in SIV-infected macaques, using 18F-FDG PET in correlation with plasma and CSF viral loads (VL) and cytokine levels.Entities:
Keywords: Antiretroviral therapy (ART); Brain; Fluorodeoxyglucose PET; SIV
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30007411 PMCID: PMC6046092 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-018-1244-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1Average change in FDG SUVmean over time after the interruption of antiretroviral therapy. The dotted line represents the average SUVmean of uninfected healthy controls.
Treatment interruption was associated with a significant increase in FDG SUVmean 1 month post-interruption (p = 0.037), but when all time points were considered in a mixed-effect linear regression model there was not a statistically significant effect of time (p = 0.236)
Fig. 2Average change in FDG SUVmean over time after the initiation of antiretroviral therapy. The dotted line represents the average SUVmean of uninfected healthy controls. At no timepoint did treatment initiation lead to statistically significant changes in uptake of FDG
Laboratory characteristics of animals before and after treatment modification
| Interruption | Initiation | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Month 1 | Month 3 | Month 6 | Baseline | Month 1 | Month 3 | Month 6 | |
| CSF VL | 0 (0) | 272 (409) | 16,741 (29,877) | 327 (462) | 6894 (10,533) | 0 (0) | 212 (473) | 0 (0) |
| Log CSF VL | 0 (0) | 1.32 (1.54) | 2.41 (2.29) | 1.41 (1.99) | 2.46 (2.56) | 0 (0) | 0.60 (1.35) | 0 (0) |
| Plasma VL | 3 (5) | 79,070 (145,887) | 258,608 (303,812) | 919,845 (1,300,023) | 362,834 (449,170) | 41 (67) | 20 (33) | 8 (8) |
| Log plasma VL | 0.27 (0.45) | 4.11 (0.99) | 4.10 (2.11) | 4.52 (2.47) | 4.89 (1.15) | 1.15 (0.79) | 0.79 (0.80) | 0.65 (0.60) |
| CD4+ cells | 783 (363) | 576 (295) | 450 (345) | 526 (343) | 235 (85) | 487 (331) | 444 (107) | 648 (135) |
| Proliferating CD4+ cells | 42 (22) | 26 (7) | 24 (16) | 15 (13) | 12 (5) | 25 (9) | 29 (16) | 43 (17) |
| CD8+ cells | 807 (424) | 726 (385) | 710 (427) | 636 (350) | 424 (256) | 763 (483) | 585 (415) | 664 (258) |
| Proliferating CD8+ cells | 29 (19) | 36 (21) | 61 (63) | 38 (7) | 24 (13) | 35 (22) | 28 (14) | 40 (21) |
| CD4/CD8 ratio | 0.98 (0.16) | 0.83 (0.20) | 0.67 (0.24) | 0.80 (0.10) | 0.64 (0.20) | 0.70 (0.21) | 0.93 (0.38) | 1.08 (0.35) |
Data are shown as mean values with standard deviations in parentheses
Plasma and CSF cytokines of the interruption and initiation cohorts over time
| Interruption | Initiation | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Month 1 | Month 3 | Month 6 | Baseline | Month 1 | Month 3 | Month 6 | ||
| Plasma | IL-2 | 5.51 (4.07) | 4.25 (5.49) | 5.75 (4.349) | 2.62 (3.70) | 9.10 (6.80) | 5.63 (3.88) | 5.82 (4.27) | 5.85 (2.49) |
| IL-10 | 2.98 (6.66) | 2.98 (6.66) | 2.98 (6.67) | 3.56 (5.03) | 8.07 (18.04) | 0 (0) | 1.22 (2.73) | 0 (0) | |
| IL-15 | 5.14 (4.44) | 4.67 (4.22) | 5.55 (1.95) | 3.98 (0.37) | 7.14 (4.16) | 3.94 (4.14) | 4.98 (2.10) | 4.83 (3.60) | |
| IL-8 | 25.59 (20.38) | 26.65 (12.01) | 77.25 (103.80) | 22.61 (8.60) | 144.60 (111.00) | 18.70 (12.07) | 38.39 (25.30) | 20.10 (15.11) | |
| IL-1Ra | 40.49 (58.85) | 38.41 (53.41) | 37.48 (42.52) | 19.16 (9.24) | 26.43 (14.19) | 18.73 (9.73) | 14.14 (8.96) | 17.03 (13.65) | |
| MCP-1 | 240.3 (65.4) | 217.9 (78.7) | 204.4 (70.1) | 245.5 (182.2) | 349.5 (287.8) | 266.2 (140.9) | 254.1 (190.5) | 270.4 (139.4) | |
| CSF | IL-2 | 16.49 (10.89) | 26.28 (23.52) | 28.19 (6.96) | 32.87 (12.38) | 21.25 (14.25) | 19.49 (6.29) | 23.49 (6.20) | 22.81 (8.09) |
| IL-10 | 20.89 (13.37) | 40.67 (31.34) | 35.61 (8.29) | 43.68 (18.27) | 29.83 (17.83) | 33.63 (13.12) | 34.61 (6.65) | 28.72 (15.97) | |
| IL-15 | 14.65 (2.93) | 16.14 (3.64) | 16.54 (5.01) | 21.37 (1.65) | 19.58 (3.01) | 16.83 (2.90) | 14.60 (1.53) | 18.24 (4.49) | |
| IL-8 | 10.50 (3.71) | 21.23 (21.2) | 14.84 (3.40) | 25.1 (0.17) | 13.61 (4.30) | 8.80 (6.58) | 10.43 (4.13) | 7.90 (2.22) | |
| IL-1Ra | 0.92 (1.85) | 5.39 (6.30) | 7.13 (4.55) | 8.97 (2.73) | 8.27 (1.65) | 2.20 (4.39) | 3.19 (5.53) | 1.76 (3.05) | |
| MCP-1 | 446.7 (76.0) | 947.2 (1070.0) | 617.1 (153.7) | 702.8 (303.5) | 641.1 (141.4) | 422.2 (121.1) | 526.6 (137.6) | 481.0 (127.6) | |
Data are shown as mean values with standard deviations in parentheses
Correlations between FDG uptake and markers of disease post-treatment interruption
| SUVmax | SUVmean | |
|---|---|---|
| Length of interruption | NS | NS |
| Log10 CSF viral load | 0.411; | NS |
| Log10 plasma viral load | 0.272; | 0.068; |
| CD4+ cell count | − 0.002; | − 0.001; |
| Proliferating CD4+ cell count | NS | − 0.010; |
| CD8+ cell count | − 0.002; | − 0.001; |
| Proliferating CD8+ cell count | NS | NS |
| CSF IL-2 | 0.045; | NS |
| CSF IL-15 | NS | 0.043; p = 0.048 |
Data are reported as slope coefficients and p values for each regression analysis
Fig. 3Correlations between whole brain SUVmean and subcompartmental SUVmean. Both central (left) and cortical (right) structures were compared to the whole brain. Correlation R2 values are reported for each subcompartment. We did not identify regional predilections for FDG changes