Barnabas Ruanne V, Celum Connie
Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98104, USA.
Curr HIV Res. 2012 Apr;10(3):228-37. doi: 10.2174/157016212800618156.
Over the last thirty years, epidemiologic and molecular studies indicate a strong and synergist relationship between the dual epidemics of herpes simplex type 2 (HSV-2) and HIV-1 infection. While prospective studies show that HSV-2 infection increases the risk for HIV-1 acquisition by 2- to 3-fold, HSV-2 suppression with standard prophylactic doses of HSV-2 therapy did not prevent HIV-1 acquisition. Reconciling these discrepancies requires understanding recent HSV-2 pathogenesis research, which indicates HSV-2 infection is not a latent infection with infrequent recurrence but a near constant state of reactivation and viral shedding which is not completely suppressed by standard antivirals. Because current antivirals do not prevent or fully suppress HSV-2 replication, priorities are HSV-2 vaccine development and antivirals that reach high concentrations in the genital mucosa and suppress the persistent genital inflammation associated with genital herpes reactivation in order to reduce the increased susceptibility to HIV-1 infection associated with HSV-2. HIV-1 and HSV-2 synergy is also seen among co-infected individuals who exhibit higher HIV-1 viral load compared to HSV-2 uninfected individuals. Standard HSV-2 therapy modestly lowers HIV-1 viral load and is associated with slower HIV-1 disease progression. A promising area of research is higher doses of HSV-2 suppressive therapy achieving a greater reduction in plasma HIV-1 RNA, which could translate to greater reductions in HIV-1 disease progression and infectiousness. However, many questions remain to be answered including potential effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of higher dose HSV-2 suppressive therapy. Mathematical models of HSV-2 and HIV-1 at a population level would be useful tools to estimate the potential impact and cost-effectiveness of higher dose HSV-2 suppressive therapy.
在过去三十年中,流行病学和分子研究表明,单纯疱疹病毒2型(HSV-2)和HIV-1感染这两种流行病之间存在着强烈的协同关系。前瞻性研究表明,HSV-2感染会使HIV-1感染风险增加2至3倍,然而,使用标准预防剂量的HSV-2疗法抑制HSV-2并不能预防HIV-1感染。要调和这些差异,需要了解最近的HSV-2发病机制研究,该研究表明HSV-2感染并非偶尔复发的潜伏感染,而是一种几乎持续的再激活和病毒脱落状态,标准抗病毒药物并不能完全抑制这种状态。由于目前的抗病毒药物无法预防或完全抑制HSV-2复制,因此重点是开发HSV-2疫苗以及能在生殖器黏膜中达到高浓度并抑制与生殖器疱疹再激活相关的持续性生殖器炎症的抗病毒药物,以降低与HSV-2相关的对HIV-1感染易感性的增加。在合并感染的个体中也观察到HIV-1和HSV-2的协同作用,与未感染HSV-2的个体相比,这些个体的HIV-1病毒载量更高。标准的HSV-2疗法可适度降低HIV-1病毒载量,并与HIV-1疾病进展较慢有关。一个有前景的研究领域是更高剂量的HSV-2抑制疗法能更大程度地降低血浆HIV-1 RNA,这可能转化为更大程度地降低HIV-1疾病进展和传染性。然而,仍有许多问题有待解答,包括更高剂量HSV-2抑制疗法的潜在有效性和成本效益。在人群水平上建立HSV-2和HIV-1的数学模型将是估计更高剂量HSV-2抑制疗法潜在影响和成本效益的有用工具。