Butler Katherine, Ritter Jana M, Ellis Shanon, Morris Monica R, Hanson Debra L, McNicholl Janet M, Kersh Ellen N
*Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, CDC, Atlanta, GA;†Division of High Consequence Pathogens and Pathology, CDC, Atlanta, GA; and‡Total Solutions, Atlanta, GA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2016 Aug 1;72(4):363-71. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000000975.
Hormonal contraception with depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) may increase HIV acquisition risk, but observational human studies are inconclusive, and animal models can help investigate this risk. In this study, we test the impact of a low DMPA dose, designed to resemble human contraceptive use, on Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (SHIV) acquisition risk in pigtail macaques (Macaca nemestrina).
Macaques metabolize DMPA faster than humans. We previously identified a per-weight DMPA dose and administration frequency that achieves long-lasting suppression of ovulation in macaques. Eight macaques were given 1.5-mg/kg DMPA monthly, whereas 11 were untreated controls. For comparison, women receive 150 mg (approximately 2 mg/kg) every 3 months. We exposed monkeys to 20 suboptimal SHIV challenges, designed to slowly infect half of controls and allow increased infection in the DMPA group.
It took a median 5.5 viral challenges to infect DMPA-treated macaques and 9 challenges for controls (P = 0.27; exact conditional logistic regression). The exact odds ratio was 2.2 (CI: 0.6 to 8.3). Ovulation was suppressed, and the vaginal epithelium was thinned after DMPA treatment in all animals (mean, 30 and 219 mm in DMPA-treated and control macaques, respectively, P = 0.03, t test using the Satterthwaite degrees-of-freedom approximation).
SHIV infections in DMPA-treated macaques were 2.2 times those of controls, but this was not statistically significant. The result is remarkably similar to studies of human DMPA use, which have shown HIV risk increases of a similar magnitude and of variable significance. Taken together with previous studies of higher DMPA doses in macaques, the results suggest a dose-dependent effect of DMPA on Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) or SHIV acquisition.
使用醋酸甲羟孕酮长效避孕针(DMPA)进行激素避孕可能会增加感染艾滋病毒的风险,但人体观察性研究尚无定论,动物模型有助于研究这一风险。在本研究中,我们测试了旨在模拟人类避孕使用情况的低剂量DMPA对猪尾猕猴(食蟹猴)感染猿猴 - 人类免疫缺陷病毒(SHIV)风险的影响。
猕猴代谢DMPA的速度比人类快。我们之前确定了一种按体重计算的DMPA剂量和给药频率,可实现对猕猴排卵的长期抑制。八只猕猴每月接受1.5毫克/千克的DMPA,而11只作为未治疗的对照。作为比较,女性每三个月接受150毫克(约2毫克/千克)。我们让猴子接受20次次优的SHIV攻击,旨在使一半的对照缓慢感染,并使DMPA组的感染增加。
感染DMPA治疗的猕猴中位数需要5.5次病毒攻击,而对照组需要9次攻击(P = 0.27;精确条件逻辑回归)。精确比值比为2.2(95%置信区间:0.6至8.3)。在所有动物中,DMPA治疗后排卵受到抑制,阴道上皮变薄(DMPA治疗的猕猴和对照猕猴的平均厚度分别为30和219微米,P = 0.03,使用萨特思韦特自由度近似值的t检验)。
接受DMPA治疗的猕猴感染SHIV的几率是对照组的2.2倍,但这在统计学上并不显著。该结果与人类使用DMPA的研究结果非常相似,后者显示感染艾滋病毒的风险有类似程度的增加且具有不同的显著性。结合之前对猕猴使用更高剂量DMPA的研究,结果表明DMPA对猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)或SHIV感染存在剂量依赖性效应。