病毒血症
炎症
免疫学
免疫系统
医学
病毒载量
CD38
病毒
病毒学
生物
干细胞
川地34
遗传学
作者
Sílvia Bernal,Maria C. Puertas,Sara Morón-López,Ross D. Cranston,Víctor Urrea,Judith Dalmau,María Salgado,Cristina Gálvez,Itziar Erkizia,Ian McGowan,Didier Scherrer,Boris Revollo,Guillem Sirera,José Ramón Santos,Bonaventura Clotet,Roger Paredes,Javier Martínez-Picado
标识
DOI:10.1093/infdis/jiad251
摘要
Abstract Background Persistence of viral reservoirs has been observed in people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), despite long-term antiretroviral therapy (ART), and likely contributes to chronic immune activation and inflammation. Obefazimod is a novel drug that inhibits human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication and reduces inflammation. Here we assess whether obefazimod is safe and might impact HIV-1 persistence, chronic immune activation, and inflammation in ART-suppressed people with HIV. Methods We evaluated obefazimod-related adverse events, changes in cell-associated HIV-1 DNA and RNA, residual viremia, immunophenotype, and inflammation biomarkers in blood and rectal tissue. We compared 24 ART-suppressed people with HIV who received daily doses of 50 mg obefazimod for 12 weeks (n = 13) or 150 mg for 4 weeks (n = 11) and 12 HIV-negative individuals who received 50 mg for 4 weeks. Results The 50- and 150-mg doses of obefazimod were safe, although the 150-mg dose showed inferior tolerability. The 150-mg dose reduced HIV-1 DNA (P = .008, median fold change = 0.6) and residual viremia in all individuals with detectable viremia at baseline. Furthermore, obefazimod upregulated miR-124 in all participants and reduced the activation markers CD38, HLA-DR, and PD-1 and several inflammation biomarkers. Conclusions The effect of obefazimod by reducing chronic immune activation and inflammation suggests a potential role for the drug in virus remission strategies involving other compounds that can activate immune cells, such as latency-reversing agents.
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