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Interventions to Reduce Inflammation and Immune Activation in Treated HIV Infection. Peter W. Hunt, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine UCSF HIV/AIDS Division. Treating Immune Activation in HIV. What have we learned from recent unsuccessful attempts?
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Interventions to Reduce Inflammationand Immune Activationin Treated HIV Infection Peter W. Hunt, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine UCSF HIV/AIDS Division
Treating Immune Activation in HIV • What have we learned from recent unsuccessful attempts? • Mechanistic pathways of HIV pathogenesis inform therapeutic interventions. • Highlight ongoing and recently reported studies of novel interventions. • Importance of studying ART-suppressed patients • A way forward
What have we learned from recent unsuccessful attempts to decrease immune activation?
IL-2 Increases CD4 Counts in Treated Patients IL-2 also decreases HLA-DR and CD38 expression (Kovacs, NEJM, 1995) Abrams et al, NEJM, 2009
However, IL-2 Had No Effect on AIDS/Death P=0.47 P=0.55 Abrams et al, NEJM, 2009
Why Didn’t IL-2 Work? Suppression of Healthy T Cell Responses Preferential Expansion of Tregs Bad for Health IL-2 Increased CD4 Count Good for Health
Maraviroc Intensification Increases CD8 Activation Compared to Placebo Hunt, CROI, 2011, Abstract 153LB
>2-fold Increase in Plasma CCR5 Ligand Levels During Maraviroc Intensification • Due to prevention of ligand-receptor complex internalization by CCR5+ cells (Lin/Corbeau, AIDS, 2007; Nakata, Antiviral Threrapy, 2010) • RANTES/MIP-1a may activate monocytes/macrophages and neutrophils via CCR1
What Have We Learned? • Immune system is complicated! • Multiple parallel and competing pathways, feedback loops • Primary effects assessed in vitro may fail to capture important competing secondary effects in vivo • Need for carefully designed placebo-controlled trials, follow up studies to elucidate these mechanisms • May need to improve more than surrogate inflammatory markers to advance to clinical endpoint trials (i.e., FMD, BMD, etc).
HIV-Mediated Immune Activation and Aging HIV-1 Infection Immunodeficiency TLR 7,8 Nef, gp120 Bacterial Translocation Viral Reactivation (eg, CMV) Innate Immune Activation (MØ/DC) Cytokine Secretion (eg, IL-6, TNFL) Increased Cell Turnover and Lymphoid Fibrosis Increased TF Expression and clotting Immune Exhaustion CAD/Stroke, Thrombosis “Inflam-Aging” (eg, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis) Malignancy, Infections Adapted from Appay V, et al. J Pathol. 2008;214:231-241.
HIV-Mediated Immune Activation and Aging HIV-1 Infection Immunodeficiency TLR 7,8 Nef, gp120 Bacterial Translocation Viral Reactivation (eg, CMV) Innate Immune Activation (MØ/DC) Cytokine Secretion (eg, IL-6, TNFL) Increased Cell Turnover and Lymphoid Fibrosis Increased TF Expression and clotting Immune Exhaustion CAD/Stroke, Thrombosis “Inflam-Aging” (eg, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis) Malignancy, Infections Adapted from Appay V, et al. J Pathol. 2008;214:231-241.
HIV-Mediated Immune Activation and Aging HIV-1 Infection Immunodeficiency TLR 7,8 Nef, gp120 Bacterial Translocation Viral Reactivation (eg, CMV) Innate Immune Activation (MØ/DC) Cytokine Secretion (eg, IL-6, TNFL) Increased Cell Turnover and Lymphoid Fibrosis Increased TF Expression and clotting Immune Exhaustion CAD/Stroke, Thrombosis “Inflam-Aging” (eg, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis) Malignancy, Infections Adapted from Appay V, et al. J Pathol. 2008;214:231-241.
Anti-LPS antibodies have no effect on CD4 recovery: CORAL HIBC= hyperimmune bovine colostrum Enriched in anti-LPS antibodies Raltegravir HIBC + n=18 placebo HIBC + n=18 HIV+ On cART CD4<350 cells/ul ∆CD4<50 past 12 months Raltegravir placebo + n=18 placebo placebo + RESULTS No effect on CD4 recovery No effect on LPS, sCD14, T cell activation n=18 Slide courtesy of Sharon Lewin Bykawaga et al, J Infect Dis 2011 (in press)
Microbial Translocation:Cause or Consequence of Immune Activation in Treated HIV Infection? • Observational studies linking MT to immune activation cannot prove causality • Causality can only be formally addressed in clinical trials • DC/Macrophage activation can cause IDO induction, ↓Th17, and microbial translocation • Ongoing/Planned studies assessing blocking microbial translocation directly • Rifaximin(ACTG) • Sevalamer (ACTG)
HIV-Mediated Immune Activation and Aging HIV-1 Infection Immunodeficiency TLR 7,8 Nef, gp120 Bacterial Translocation Viral Reactivation (eg, CMV) Innate Immune Activation (MØ/DC) Cytokine Secretion (eg, IL-6, TNFL) Increased Cell Turnover and Lymphoid Fibrosis Increased TF Expression and clotting Immune Exhaustion CAD/Stroke, Thrombosis “Inflam-Aging” (eg, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis) Malignancy, Infections Adapted from Appay V, et al. J Pathol. 2008;214:231-241.
Chloroquine Might Reduce CD8 Activationin Untreated HIV+ Patients Chloroquine Placebo • No apparent effect on plasma HIV RNA Levels (though some missing data) • Possible early decrease in plasma LPS • Probable mechanism: TLR inhibition (3,4,7,8,9) Murray, JV, 2010
Hydroxychloroquine Did Not Reduce CD8 Activation in Untreated HIV+ Patients Viral Load %CD38+HLA-DR+ CD8s Plasma HIV RNA Level (log10 copies/ml) Why did viral load increase with HCQ? And why didn’t CD8 activation increase with the increase in VL? Paton, IAS 2011, MOPE269
Impact of Innate Immune ResponseUntreated HIV Disease IL-6, TNFα↑ TF expression, D-dimer ↑ T cell turnover/exhaustion ↑ LN fibrosis ↑ Direct Antiviral Effects Adjuvant to HIV-specific T cells The Bad: Immune Activation ↑ The Good: HIV replication ↓ Immune Activation ↓
Impact of Innate Immune ResponseDuring ART-mediated VL Suppression Antiviral Effects Irrelevant IL-6, TNFα↑ TF expression, D-dimer ↑ T cell turnover/exhaustion LN fibrosis The Good: None VL already suppressed by drugs The Bad Immune Activation ↑
HCQ Decreases Immune Activation in ART-suppressed Immunologic Non-responders %CD38+ Memory CD8s %CD69+ CD14+ Monocytes Piconi, Blood, 2011
HIV-Mediated Immune Activation and Aging HIV-1 Infection Immunodeficiency TLR 7,8 Nef, gp120 Bacterial Translocation Viral Reactivation (eg, CMV) Innate Immune Activation (MØ/DC) Cytokine Secretion (eg, IL-6, TNFL) Increased Cell Turnover and Lymphoid Fibrosis Increased TF Expression and clotting Immune Exhaustion CAD/Stroke, Thrombosis “Inflam-Aging” (eg, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis) Malignancy, Infections Adapted from Appay V, et al. J Pathol. 2008;214:231-241.
Decreasing Asymptomatic CMV Replication with Valganciclovir Decreases Immune Activation in HIV+ Patients with CD4<350 despite ART -4.4% HIV- Median • Cytopenias may limit long-term usefulness. • Need new, safer CMV agents! Hunt et al, JID, 2011
HIV-Mediated Immune Activation and Aging HIV-1 Infection Immunodeficiency TLR 7,8 Nef, gp120 Bacterial Translocation Viral Reactivation (eg, CMV) Innate Immune Activation (MØ/DC) Cytokine Secretion (eg, IL-6, TNFL) Increased Cell Turnover and Lymphoid Fibrosis Increased TF Expression and clotting Immune Exhaustion CAD/Stroke, Thrombosis “Inflam-Aging” (eg, atherosclerosis, osteoporosis) Malignancy, Infections Adapted from Appay V, et al. J Pathol. 2008;214:231-241.
Atorvostatin Decreases T Cell Activation in Untreated HIV Infection • 24 untreated patients, X-over design • Significant reduction in HLA-DR on CD8s during atorvostatin Tx • No effect on plasma HIV RNA levels • Studies ongoing in ART-suppressed patients Atorvostatin 80mg Placebo Ganesan, J Infect Dis, 2011
COX-2 Inhibition Decreases T Cell Activation in Untreated HIV Infection • 27 untreated patients, 12 weeks celecoxib vs. placebo. • Significant reduction in CD38 on CD8s during celecoxib Tx • No effect on plasma HIV RNA levels • CAD toxicity a potential problem with celecoxib • ASA? Mesalamine? CD38 Molecules/cell Celecoxib Placebo Pettersen, JV, 2011
Other Strategies to block Monocyte/Macrophage Activation? • Combined CCR5/CCR2 blockade? • CCR5 inhibition increased immune activation, likely indirectly through MØ activation • CCR2 (MCP-1 receptor) blockade might overcome this effect? • IDO inhibitors? • Prevent proliferative defects and allow for restoration of Th17 cells • Might interrupt vicious circle of microbial translocation and innate immune activation
Immunosuppressive Therapies • TNFα inhibitors IL-6 inhibitors • CTLA-4 analogs IL-23/IL-12 inhibitors • Steroids Cyclosporine • Methotrexate Decreased Immune Activation Suppression of Healthy Immune Reponses The Good The Bad
A Way Forward… • Target proximal causes of monocyte activation • Small pilot trials to establish proof of principal • “Immunologic Non-Responders” have higher immune activation and are at highest risk for disease • Studying treated patients allows cleaner biologic inferences • Need to thoroughly evaluate mechanistic pathways in vivo • Advance promising agents to mid-range trials with surrogate markers of end-organ disease • Liver, renal, bone (BMD), cardiovascular (FMD) • Advance promising/safe/scalable interventions to clinical endpoint trials