AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to see how a new HIV treatment strategy affects the brain and nervous system in people who were treated early for the virus.
  • The researchers tested a vaccine (MVA.HIVconsv) and a medicine (romidepsin) on 15 people to check if there were any changes in their thinking and brain health over time.
  • The results showed that there were no harmful effects on brain function or mental skills after using the treatment, meaning it was safe for those participants.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the central nervous system (CNS) impact of a kick&kill HIV cure strategy using therapeutic vaccine MVA.HIVconsv and the histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) romidepsin (RMD) as latency-reversing agent.

Design: Neurological observational substudy of the BCN02 trial (NCT02616874), a proof-of-concept, open-label, single-arm, phase I clinical trial testing the safety and immunogenicity of the MVA.HIVconsv vaccine and RMD in early-treated HIV-1-infected individuals. A monitored antiretroviral pause (MAP) was performed, with cART resumption after 2 pVL more than 2000 copies/ml. Reinitiated participants were followed for 24 weeks.

Methods: Substudy participation was offered to all BCN02 participants (N = 15). Evaluations covered cognitive, functional, and brain imaging outcomes, performed before RMD administration (pre-RMD), after three RMD infusions (post-RMD), and at the end of the study (EoS). A group of early-treated HIV-1-infected individuals with matched clinical characteristics was additionally recruited (n = 10). Primary endpoint was change in a global cognitive score (NPZ-6).

Results: Eleven participants from BCN02 trial were enrolled. No significant changes were observed in cognitive, functional, or brain imaging outcomes from pre-RMD to post-RMD. No relevant alterations were detected from pre-RMD to EoS either. Scores at EoS were similar in participants off cART for 32 weeks (n = 3) and those who resumed therapy for 24 weeks (n = 7). Controls showed comparable punctuations in NPZ-6 across all timepoints.

Conclusion: No detrimental effects on cognitive status, functional outcomes, or brain imaging parameters were observed after using the HDACi RMD as latency-reversing agent with the MVA.HIVconsv vaccine in early-treated HIV-1-infected individuals. CNS safety was also confirmed after completion of the MAP.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000003121DOI Listing

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