Thalidomide is Associated With Increased T Cell Activation and Inflammation in Antiretroviral-naive HIV-infected Individuals in a Randomised Clinical Trial of Efficacy and Safety

一项关于疗效和安全性的随机临床试验表明,沙利度胺与未接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的 HIV 感染者的 T 细胞活化和炎症增加有关

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作者:Tânia R C Vergara, Sadia Samer, Joanna R Santos-Oliveira, Leila B Giron, Muhammad Shoaib Arif, Maria Luciana Silva-Freitas, Lia A Cherman, Mauro S Treitsman, Alberto Chebabo, Maria Cecilia A Sucupira, Alda M Da-Cruz, Ricardo Sobhie Diaz; SPARC Working Group

Conclusions

Short-term use of thalidomide led to an intense transient increase in T cell activation and inflammation, with a decrease in the CD4+ cell count without changes to the CD8+ cell count. We confirmed that thalidomide acts in vitro as a latency reversal agent and speculate that the in vivo results obtained were due to an increase in HIV replication.

Methods

Participants: Antiretroviral naïve adult males with CD4 count ≥350cells/mm3. Interventions: Patients were randomised to receive thalidomide 200mg QD for 3weeks (Thalidomide group) or not (Control group) and followed for 48weeks. Objective: We hypothesized that short-term Thalidomide use would reduce HIV related inflammation and HIV replication among antiretroviral naïve HIV infected individuals. Outcome: Viral loads, CD4/CD8 counts, ultra-sensitive C-reactive protein (US-CRP), cell activation markers, and plasma lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were analyzed. Randomisation: Unrestricted randomisation. Blinding: No blinding was used.

Objective

We hypothesized that short-term Thalidomide use would reduce HIV related inflammation and HIV replication among antiretroviral naïve HIV infected individuals. Outcome: Viral loads, CD4/CD8 counts, ultra-sensitive C-reactive protein (US-CRP), cell activation markers, and plasma lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were analyzed. Randomisation: Unrestricted randomisation. Blinding: No blinding was used.

Results

Numbers randomised: Thirty recruited individuals were randomised to Thalidomide (16 patients) or Control (14 patients) groups. Recruitment: Patients were recruited from April 2011 to January 2013. Outcome: Viral loads remained stable in both groups. During thalidomide treatment, a decrease in CD4/CD8 ratio (p=0.04), a decrease in CD4 count (p=0.04), an increase in cell activation calculated by the percentage of CD38 +/HLA-DR+ CD8 cells (p<0.05) and an increase in US-CRP (p<0.01) were observed in the Thalidomide group, with all parameters returning to baseline levels after thalidomide interruption. We confirmed that thalidomide increased HIV replication in vitro of 6 of 7 samples from long-term antiretroviral suppressed individuals. Harms: No class 3/4 adverse events occurred. Conclusions: Short-term use of thalidomide led to an intense transient increase in T cell activation and inflammation, with a decrease in the CD4+ cell count without changes to the CD8+ cell count. We confirmed that thalidomide acts in vitro as a latency reversal agent and speculate that the in vivo results obtained were due to an increase in HIV replication.

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