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Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission

BACKGROUND: Microbicides must protect against STD pathogens without causing unacceptable toxic effects. Microbicides based on nonoxynol-9 (N9) and other detergents disrupt sperm, HSV and HIV membranes, and these agents are effective contraceptives. But paradoxically N9 fails to protect women against...

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Autores principales: Cone, Richard A, Hoen, Timothy, Wong, XiXi, Abusuwwa, Raed, Anderson, Deborah J, Moench, Thomas R
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1523343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16740164
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-6-90
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author Cone, Richard A
Hoen, Timothy
Wong, XiXi
Abusuwwa, Raed
Anderson, Deborah J
Moench, Thomas R
author_facet Cone, Richard A
Hoen, Timothy
Wong, XiXi
Abusuwwa, Raed
Anderson, Deborah J
Moench, Thomas R
author_sort Cone, Richard A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Microbicides must protect against STD pathogens without causing unacceptable toxic effects. Microbicides based on nonoxynol-9 (N9) and other detergents disrupt sperm, HSV and HIV membranes, and these agents are effective contraceptives. But paradoxically N9 fails to protect women against HIV and other STD pathogens, most likely because it causes toxic effects that increase susceptibility. The mouse HSV-2 vaginal transmission model reported here: (a) Directly tests for toxic effects that increase susceptibility to HSV-2, (b) Determines in vivo whether a microbicide can protect against HSV-2 transmission without causing toxicities that increase susceptibility, and (c) Identifies those toxic effects that best correlate with the increased HSV susceptibility. METHODS: Susceptibility was evaluated in progestin-treated mice by delivering a low-dose viral inoculum (0.1 ID(50)) at various times after delivering the candidate microbicide to detect whether the candidate increased the fraction of mice infected. Ten agents were tested – five detergents: nonionic (N9), cationic (benzalkonium chloride, BZK), anionic (sodium dodecylsulfate, SDS), the pair of detergents in C31G (C(14)AO and C(16)B); one surface active agent (chlorhexidine); two non-detergents (BufferGel(®), and sulfonated polystyrene, SPS); and HEC placebo gel (hydroxyethylcellulose). Toxic effects were evaluated by histology, uptake of a 'dead cell' dye, colposcopy, enumeration of vaginal macrophages, and measurement of inflammatory cytokines. RESULTS: A single dose of N9 protected against HSV-2 for a few minutes but then rapidly increased susceptibility, which reached maximum at 12 hours. When applied at the minimal concentration needed for brief partial protection, all five detergents caused a subsequent increase in susceptibility at 12 hours of ~20–30-fold. Surprisingly, colposcopy failed to detect visible signs of the N9 toxic effect that increased susceptibility at 12 hours. Toxic effects that occurred contemporaneously with increased susceptibility were rapid exfoliation and re-growth of epithelial cell layers, entry of macrophages into the vaginal lumen, and release of one or more inflammatory cytokines (Il-1β, KC, MIP 1α, RANTES). The non-detergent microbicides and HEC placebo caused no significant increase in susceptibility or toxic effects. CONCLUSION: This mouse HSV-2 model provides a sensitive method to detect microbicide-induced toxicities that increase susceptibility to infection. In this model, there was no concentration at which detergents provided protection without significantly increasing susceptibility.
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spelling pubmed-15233432006-07-28 Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission Cone, Richard A Hoen, Timothy Wong, XiXi Abusuwwa, Raed Anderson, Deborah J Moench, Thomas R BMC Infect Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Microbicides must protect against STD pathogens without causing unacceptable toxic effects. Microbicides based on nonoxynol-9 (N9) and other detergents disrupt sperm, HSV and HIV membranes, and these agents are effective contraceptives. But paradoxically N9 fails to protect women against HIV and other STD pathogens, most likely because it causes toxic effects that increase susceptibility. The mouse HSV-2 vaginal transmission model reported here: (a) Directly tests for toxic effects that increase susceptibility to HSV-2, (b) Determines in vivo whether a microbicide can protect against HSV-2 transmission without causing toxicities that increase susceptibility, and (c) Identifies those toxic effects that best correlate with the increased HSV susceptibility. METHODS: Susceptibility was evaluated in progestin-treated mice by delivering a low-dose viral inoculum (0.1 ID(50)) at various times after delivering the candidate microbicide to detect whether the candidate increased the fraction of mice infected. Ten agents were tested – five detergents: nonionic (N9), cationic (benzalkonium chloride, BZK), anionic (sodium dodecylsulfate, SDS), the pair of detergents in C31G (C(14)AO and C(16)B); one surface active agent (chlorhexidine); two non-detergents (BufferGel(®), and sulfonated polystyrene, SPS); and HEC placebo gel (hydroxyethylcellulose). Toxic effects were evaluated by histology, uptake of a 'dead cell' dye, colposcopy, enumeration of vaginal macrophages, and measurement of inflammatory cytokines. RESULTS: A single dose of N9 protected against HSV-2 for a few minutes but then rapidly increased susceptibility, which reached maximum at 12 hours. When applied at the minimal concentration needed for brief partial protection, all five detergents caused a subsequent increase in susceptibility at 12 hours of ~20–30-fold. Surprisingly, colposcopy failed to detect visible signs of the N9 toxic effect that increased susceptibility at 12 hours. Toxic effects that occurred contemporaneously with increased susceptibility were rapid exfoliation and re-growth of epithelial cell layers, entry of macrophages into the vaginal lumen, and release of one or more inflammatory cytokines (Il-1β, KC, MIP 1α, RANTES). The non-detergent microbicides and HEC placebo caused no significant increase in susceptibility or toxic effects. CONCLUSION: This mouse HSV-2 model provides a sensitive method to detect microbicide-induced toxicities that increase susceptibility to infection. In this model, there was no concentration at which detergents provided protection without significantly increasing susceptibility. BioMed Central 2006-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1523343/ /pubmed/16740164 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-6-90 Text en Copyright © 2006 Cone et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cone, Richard A
Hoen, Timothy
Wong, XiXi
Abusuwwa, Raed
Anderson, Deborah J
Moench, Thomas R
Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
title Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
title_full Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
title_fullStr Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
title_full_unstemmed Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
title_short Vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
title_sort vaginal microbicides: detecting toxicities in vivo that paradoxically increase pathogen transmission
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1523343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16740164
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-6-90
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