8 research outputs found

    MTN-001: Randomized Pharmacokinetic Cross-Over Study Comparing Tenofovir Vaginal Gel and Oral Tablets in Vaginal Tissue and Other Compartments

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    Background: Oral and vaginal preparations of tenofovir as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection have demonstrated variable efficacy in men and women prompting assessment of variation in drug concentration as an explanation. Knowledge of tenofovir concentration and its active form, tenofovir diphosphate, at the putative vaginal and rectal site of action and its relationship to concentrations at multiple other anatomic locations may provide key information for both interpreting PrEP study outcomes and planning future PrEP drug development. Objective: MTN-001 was designed to directly compare oral to vaginal steady-state tenofovir pharmacokinetics in blood, vaginal tissue, and vaginal and rectal fluid in a paired cross-over design. Methods and Findings: We enrolled 144 HIV-uninfected women at 4 US and 3 African clinical research sites in an open label, 3-period crossover study of three different daily tenofovir regimens, each for 6 weeks (oral 300 mg tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, vaginal 1% tenofovir gel [40 mg], or both). Serum concentrations after vaginal dosing were 56-fold lower than after oral dosing (p<0.001). Vaginal tissue tenofovir diphosphate was quantifiable in ≥90% of women with vaginal dosing and only 19% of women with oral dosing. Vaginal tissue tenofovir diphosphate was ≥130-fold higher with vaginal compared to oral dosing (p<0.001). Rectal fluid tenofovir concentrations in vaginal dosing periods were higher than concentrations measured in the oral only dosing period (p<0.03). Conclusions: Compared to oral dosing, vaginal dosing achieved much lower serum concentrations and much higher vaginal tissue concentrations. Even allowing for 100-fold concentration differences due to poor adherence or less frequent prescribed dosing, vaginal dosing of tenofovir should provide higher active site concentrations and theoretically greater PrEP efficacy than oral dosing; randomized topical dosing PrEP trials to the contrary indicates that factors beyond tenofovir's antiviral effect substantially influence PrEP efficacy. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00592124

    The role of neutralizing antibodies in prevention of HIV-1 infection: what can we learn from the mother-to-child transmission context?

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    International audienceIn most viral infections, protection through existing vaccines is linked to the presence of vaccine-induced neutralizing antibodies (NAbs). However, more than 30 years after the identification of AIDS, the design of an immunogen able to induce antibodies that would neutralize the highly diverse HIV-1 variants remains one of the most puzzling challenges of the human microbiology. The role of antibodies in protection against HIV-1 can be studied in a natural situation that is the mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) context. Indeed, at least at the end of pregnancy, maternal antibodies of the IgG class are passively transferred to the fetus protecting the neonate from new infections during the first weeks or months of life. During the last few years, strong data, presented in this review, have suggested that some NAbs might confer protection toward neonatal HIV-1 infection. In cases of transmission, it has been shown that the viral population that is transmitted from the mother to the infant is usually homogeneous, genetically restricted and resistant to the maternal HIV-1-specific antibodies. Although the breath of neutralization was not associated with protection, it has not been excluded that NAbs toward specific HIV-1 strains might be associated with a lower rate of MTCT. A better identification of the antibody specificities that could mediate protection toward MTCT of HIV-1 would provide important insights into the antibody responses that would be useful for vaccine development. The most convincing data suggesting that NAbs migh confer protection against HIV-1 infection have been obtained by experiments of passive immunization of newborn macaques with the first generation of human monoclonal broadly neutralizing antibodies (HuMoNAbs). However, these studies, which included only a few selected subtype B challenge viruses, provide data limited to protection against a very restricted number of isolates and therefore have limitations in addressing the hypervariability of HIV-1. The recent identification of highly potent second-generation cross-clade HuMoNAbs provides a new opportunity to evaluate the efficacy of passive immunization to prevent MTCT of HIV-1

    Human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) and the etiopathogenesis of Kaposi's sarcoma Herpesvírus humano tipo 8 (HHV-8) e a etiopatogênese do sarcoma de Kaposi

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    OBJECTIVE: To review the current literature on human herpesvirus 8 with particular attention to the aspects related to the etiopathogenesis of Kaposi's sarcoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The authors searched original research and review articles on specific aspects of human herpesvirus 8 infection, including virology, epidemiology, transmission, diagnosis, natural history, therapy, and Kaposi's sarcoma etiopathogenesis. The relevant material was evaluated and reviewed. RESULTS: Human herpesvirus 8 is a recently discovered DNA virus that is present throughout the world but with major geographic variation. In the Western world, the virus, transmitted mainly by means of sexual contact, is strongly associated with Kaposi's sarcoma and body cavity-based lymphoma and more controversially with multiple myeloma and other non-proliferative disorders. There is no specific effective treatment, but HIV protease inhibitors may play an indirect role in the clearance of human herpesvirus 8 DNA from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of HIV-infected patients. Human herpesvirus 8 DNA is present in saliva, but there are as yet no documented cases of nosocomial transmission to health care workers. The prevalence of human herpesvirus 8 among health care workers is probably similar to that in the general population. CONCLUSION: Human herpesvirus 8 appears to be, at least in Western Europe and United States, restricted to a population at risk of developing Kaposi's sarcoma. Human herpesvirus 8 certainly has the means to overcome cellular control and immune responses and thus predispose carriers to malignancy, particularly Kaposi's sarcoma. The wide diffusion of Human herpesvirus 8 in classic Kaposi's sarcoma areas appears to represent an important factor in the high incidence of the disease. However, additional co-factors are likely to play a role in the development of Kaposi's sarcoma.<br>OBJETIVO: O objetivo do presente artigo foi revisar a literatura recente em relação ao herpesvírus humano tipo 8, com ênfase especial aos aspectos relacionados à etiopatogênese do sarcoma de Kaposi. MÉTODOS: Os autores pesquisaram artigos de pesquisa original e revisões de literatura nos aspectos específicos da infecção pelo herpesvírus humano tipo 8, incluindo, virologia, epidemiologia, transmissão, diagnóstico, história natural e terapia. O material considerado relevante foi avaliado e revisado. RESULTADOS: O sarcoma de Kaposi é considerado ainda a malignidade mais comumente observada em pacientes infectados pelo HIV. Estudos epidemiológicos, assim como os baseados em técnicas de biologia molecular indicam que um agente sexualmente transmissível, independente do HIV, deve estar envolvido na etiologia do sarcoma de Kaposi, possivelmente como resultado da ação das cell signaling proteins superando os aspectos da resposta imune. O herpesvírus humano tipo 8 tem sido ainda sugerido como agente causal na patogênese de outras desordens, incluindo mieloma múltiplo, multicentric Castleman's disease, body cavity-based lymphoma, além de outras condições não-proliferativas como sarcoidose e pênfigo vulgar, embora grande parte dos estudos sorológicos apontem para uma soroprevalência em torno de 2 a 10%. O herpesvírus humano tipo 8 parece então, ser um vírus restrito a pessoas sob risco de desenvolver o sarcoma de Kaposi, associado à imunossupressão. O tratamento para o sarcoma de Kaposi é normalmente paliativo, e inclui a aplicação de vimblastina intra-lesional, crio-cirurgia, interferon-alpha e outras formas de terapia. Mais recentemente, os inibidores da protease, foram também sugeridos como possíveis agentes implicados na remissão do sarcoma de Kaposi associado ao HIV e no desaparecimento do herpesvírus humano tipo 8 das células mononucleares do sangue periférico. CONCLUSÃO: O herpesvírus humano tipo 8 está fortemente associado a todas as formas de sarcoma de Kaposi, multicentric Castleman's disease e body cavity-based lymphoma. Ainda, não existe tratamento definitivo para o sarcoma de Kaposi
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