Evolution of HIV Reservoir, Inflammation and Microbiota Footprint of PLWH Switching to Long-acting Injectable Treatment Compared to Patients on Oral Dual or Triple Anti-integrase-based Therapy
Evolution of HIV Reservoir, Inflammation and Microbiota Footprint of PLWH Switching to Long-acting Injectable Treatment Compared to Patients on Oral Dual or Triple Anti-integrase-based Therapy: a Prospective Longitudinal Comparative Study
Hôpital Européen Marseille
120 participants
Apr 11, 2022
OBSERVATIONAL
Conditions
Summary
In the last 40 years of HIV history, we have managed to attain most of our therapeutic objectives, namely virological suppression of most patients and sufficient immune reconstitution. Still, immune activation and inflammation persist and even if they decrease on ART (AntiRetroviral Treatment), they do not disappear and may be associated to multiple non-AIDS related comorbidities. In this population structural and functional modifications of GALT (Gut Associated Lymphoïd Tissue) are observed early after HIV infection and persist despite virological suppression on ART. Moreover, imbalance of the gut microbiota which is called dysbiosis may participate in persistent activation and therefore enhancement of residual HIV viral replication. GALT modifications are associated with microbial translocation that is also correlated with immune activation and dysbiosis. Up to now, there is no evidence of a differential impact on inflammation, immune activation or cellular reservoirs of different ART regimens. Long-Acting (LA) regimens could theoretically display better inflammatory profile, since they have a better tissue distribution and could act more efficiently on HIV reservoirs. On the other hand, LA's direct administration shunting the gut passage could also contribute to less gut dysbiosis. The objective of our study is to assess impact on plasma biomarkers, cell-surface biomarkers, intestinal microbiota and cellular reservoirs of a switch from an oral dual or triple anti-integrase-based therapy ART regimen including an anti-integrase compared to a Long-Acting (LA) injectable treatment.
Eligibility
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Interventions
Stool samples will be collected from participants at baseline and W52
Blood plasma collection to assess persistent inflammation, immune activation and HIV reservoir at baseline,W24,W52
Locations(1)
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NCT05303337