Despite antiretroviral therapy, proviral latency of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) remains a principal obstacle to curing the infection [1]. Inducing the expression of latent genomes within resting CD4+ T cells is the primary strategy to clear this reservoir [2]. While histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors such as suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA or vorinostat, VOR) can disrupt HIV-1 latency in vitro [3–5], the utility of this approach has never been directly proven in a translational clinical study of HIV-infected patients.Therefore we isolated the circulating resting CD4+ T cells of patients in whom viremia was fully suppressed by antiretroviral therapy (ART), and directly studied the effect of VOR in this latent reservoir. In each of eight patients studied, a single dose of VOR increased both biomarkers of cellular acetylation, and simultaneously induced an increase in HIV RNA expression in resting CD4+ cells (mean increase 4.8-fold). This is the first demonstration that a molecular mechanism known to enforce HIV latency can be therapeutically targeted in man, provides proof-of-concept for HDAC inhibitors as a new therapeutic class, and defines a precise approach to test novel strategies to directly attack and eradicate latent HIV infection.
HIV type 1 (HIV-1) persists within resting CD4 + T cells despite antiretroviral therapy (ART). To better understand the kinetics by which resting cell infection (RCI) is established, we developed a mathematical model that accurately predicts (r = 0.65, P = 2.5 × 10 −4 ) the initial frequency of RCI measured about 1 year postinfection, based on the time of ART initiation and the dynamic changes in viremia and CD4 + T cells. In the largest cohort of patients treated during acute seronegative HIV infection (AHI) in whom RCI has been stringently quantified, we found that early ART reduced the generation of latently infected cells. Although RCI declined after the first year of ART in most acutely infected patients, there was a striking absence of decline when initial RCI frequency was less than 0.5 per million. Notably, low-level viremia was observed more frequently as RCI increased. Together these observations suggest that (i) the degree of RCI is directly related to the availability of CD4 + T cells susceptible to HIV, whether viremia is controlled by the immune response and/or ART; and (ii) that two pools of infected resting CD4 + T cells exist, namely, less stable cells, observable in patients in whom viremia is not well controlled in early infection, and extremely stable cells that are established despite early ART. These findings reinforce and extend the concept that new approaches will be needed to eradicate HIV infection, and, in particular, highlight the need to target the extremely small but universal, long-lived latent reservoir.HIV latency | viral kinetics
Background: Contemporary data regarding pregnancy outcomes in US patients with primary glomerular diseases are lacking. We aimed to report fetal and maternal outcomes among women with biopsy-proven primary glomerular disease who received obstetric care at a single large academic US center. Methods: All women with a biopsy-confirmed primary glomerular disease diagnosis and without end-stage kidney disease who received obstetric care at the University of North Carolina (UNC) Hospitals (1996-2015) were identified using the Glomerular Disease Collaborative Network registry and the UNC Hospitals Perinatal Database. The primary study outcome was perinatal death (stillbirth at >20 weeks or neonatal death). Secondary outcomes included premature birth (<37 weeks), birth weight, preeclampsia, and kidney function changes (postpartum vs. baseline). Demographics, clinical characteristics, and outcomes were compared across glomerular disease subtypes. Results: Among 48 pregnancies in 43 women (IgA nephropathy n = 17, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis [FSGS] n = 16, membranous nephropathy n = 6, minimal change disease n = 4), 13% of pregnancies resulted in perinatal death and 48% of babies were born prematurely. From a maternal perspective, 33% of pregnancies were complicated by preeclampsia, 39% by a doubling of urinary protein, and 27% by a ≥50% increase in serum creatinine. Outcome differences across glomerular disease subtypes were not statistically significant, although decline in kidney function appeared most frequent in FSGS. Conclusion: Adverse pregnancy outcomes are frequently observed in women with glomerular disease. The independent influence of glomerular disease subtype on outcomes requires further study. More widespread reporting and analysis of pregnancy outcomes in women with glomerular disease are urgently needed.
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