Peterson Christopher W, Haworth Kevin G, Polacino Patricia, Huang Meei-Li, Sykes Craig, Obenza Willimark M, Repetto Andrea C, Kashuba Angela, Bumgarner Roger, DeRosa Stephen C, Woolfrey Ann E, Jerome Keith R, Mullins James I, Hu Shiu-Lok, Kiem Hans-Peter
aClinical Research Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center bWashington National Primate Research Center, Seattle cVaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington dDivision of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina eDepartment of Microbiology fDepartment of Pediatrics gDepartment of Laboratory Medicine hDepartment of Medicine iDepartment of Pharmaceutics jDepartment of Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA. *Christopher W. Peterson and Kevin G. Haworth contributed equally to the writing of this article.
AIDS. 2015 Aug 24;29(13):1597-606. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000702.
We have previously demonstrated robust control of simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV1157-ipd3N4) viremia following administration of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) in pigtailed macaques. Here, we sought to determine the safety of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in cART-suppressed and unsuppressed animals.
We compared disease progression in animals challenged with SHIV 100 days post-transplant, to controls that underwent transplant following SHIV challenge and stable cART-dependent viral suppression.
SHIV viral load, cART levels, and anti-SHIV antibodies were measured longitudinally from plasma/serum from each animal. Flow cytometry was used to assess T-cell subset frequencies in peripheral blood and the gastrointestinal tract. Deep sequencing was used to identify cART resistance mutations.
In control animals, virus challenge induced transient peak viremia, viral set point, and durable suppression by cART. Subsequent HSCT was not associated with adverse events in these animals. Post-transplant animals were challenged during acute recovery following HSCT, and displayed sustained peak viremia and cART resistance. Although post-transplant animals had comparable plasma levels of antiretroviral drugs and showed no evidence of enhanced infection of myeloid subsets in the periphery, they exhibited a drastic reduction in virus-specific antibody production and decreased T-cell counts.
These results suggest that virus challenge prior to complete transplant recovery impairs viral control and may promote drug resistance. These findings may also have implications for scheduled treatment interruption studies in patients on cART during post-HSCT recovery: premature scheduled treatment interruption could similarly result in lack of viral control and cART resistance.
我们之前已经证明,在猪尾猕猴中给予联合抗逆转录病毒疗法(cART)后,猿猴/人类免疫缺陷病毒(SHIV1157-ipd3N4)病毒血症得到了有效控制。在此,我们试图确定造血干细胞移植(HSCT)在接受cART抑制和未抑制的动物中的安全性。
我们比较了移植后100天接受SHIV攻击的动物与在SHIV攻击后接受移植并实现稳定的cART依赖性病毒抑制的对照组动物的疾病进展情况。
纵向测量每只动物血浆/血清中的SHIV病毒载量、cART水平和抗SHIV抗体。使用流式细胞术评估外周血和胃肠道中的T细胞亚群频率。使用深度测序来鉴定cART耐药突变。
在对照动物中,病毒攻击诱导了短暂的病毒血症峰值、病毒设定点,并通过cART实现了持久抑制。随后的HSCT在这些动物中未引发不良事件。移植后的动物在HSCT后的急性恢复期间受到攻击,并表现出持续的病毒血症峰值和cART耐药性。尽管移植后的动物抗逆转录病毒药物的血浆水平相当,且外周血中髓系亚群没有增强感染的迹象,但它们的病毒特异性抗体产生大幅减少,T细胞计数降低。
这些结果表明,在移植完全恢复之前进行病毒攻击会损害病毒控制,并可能促进耐药性。这些发现也可能对HSCT恢复期间接受cART治疗的患者的计划治疗中断研究产生影响:过早的计划治疗中断可能同样导致病毒控制不佳和cART耐药。