Sustained control of viremia following therapeutic immunization in chronically HIV-1-infected individuals |
| |
Authors: | Lévy Yves Durier Christine Lascaux Anne-Sophie Meiffrédy Vincent Gahéry-Ségard Hanne Goujard Cécile Rouzioux Christine Resch Martine Guillet Jean-Gérard Kazatchkine Michel Delfraissy Jean-Fran?ois Aboulker Jean-Pierre;ANRS Study Group |
| |
Institution: | H?pital Henri Mondor, 51 av Mal de Lattre de Tassigny, 94010 Créteil, France. yves.levy@hmn.ap-hop-paris.fr |
| |
Abstract: | OBJECTIVE: Viral rebounds inevitably follow interruption of antiretroviral treatment in HIV-1-infected individuals. The randomized ANRS 093 aimed at investigating whether a therapeutic immunization was effective in containing the long-term viral replication following discontinuation of antiretroviral drugs in patients. METHODS: Seventy HIV-1-infected patients effectively treated with antiretroviral drugs were randomized to continue treatment alone or in combination with four boosts of ALVAC 1433 and HIV-LIPO-6T vaccines followed by three cycles of subcutaneous interleukin-2. The impact of vaccination on viral replication was assessed by interrupting antiretroviral drugs first at week 40 and thereafter during follow-up until week 100. Antiretroviral drugs were re-initiated according to predefined criteria. RESULTS: The median cumulative time (days) off treatment was greater in the vaccine group (177) than in the control group (89) (P = 0.01). The proportion of time (mean, SE) without antivirals per-patient was 42.8% (5.1) and 26.5% (4.2) in the vaccine and control groups, respectively (P = 0.005). Viremia (median log10 copies/ml), 4 weeks following the first, second and third treatment interruption was higher in control patients (4.81, 4.44, 4.53) in comparison with vaccinated patients (4.48, 4.00, 3.66) (P = 0.42, 0.015 and 0.024, respectively). HIV-specific CD4 and CD8 T-cell responses elicited by the therapeutic immunization strongly correlated with the reduction of the time of antiviral therapy (P = 0.0027 and 0.016, respectively). CONCLUSION: Our findings provide evidence that therapeutic immunization significantly impacts on HIV-1 replication. This translated into a decrease of up to 40% in the duration of exposure to antiretroviral drugs over 15 months of patients' follow-up. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|