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Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial

BACKGROUND: Highly active antiretroviral therapy produces a significant decrease in HIV-1 replication and allows an increase in the CD4 T-cell count, leading to a decrease in the incidence of opportunistic infections and mortality. However, the cost, side effects and complexity of antiretroviral reg...

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Autores principales: Montoya, Carlos J, Jaimes, Fabian, Higuita, Edwin A, Convers-Páez, Sandra, Estrada, Santiago, Gutierrez, Francisco, Amariles, Pedro, Giraldo, Newar, Peñaloza, Cristina, Rugeles, Maria T
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2705367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19538732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-10-41
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author Montoya, Carlos J
Jaimes, Fabian
Higuita, Edwin A
Convers-Páez, Sandra
Estrada, Santiago
Gutierrez, Francisco
Amariles, Pedro
Giraldo, Newar
Peñaloza, Cristina
Rugeles, Maria T
author_facet Montoya, Carlos J
Jaimes, Fabian
Higuita, Edwin A
Convers-Páez, Sandra
Estrada, Santiago
Gutierrez, Francisco
Amariles, Pedro
Giraldo, Newar
Peñaloza, Cristina
Rugeles, Maria T
author_sort Montoya, Carlos J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Highly active antiretroviral therapy produces a significant decrease in HIV-1 replication and allows an increase in the CD4 T-cell count, leading to a decrease in the incidence of opportunistic infections and mortality. However, the cost, side effects and complexity of antiretroviral regimens have underscored the immediate need for additional therapeutic approaches. Statins exert pleiotropic effects through a variety of mechanisms, among which there are several immunoregulatory effects, related and unrelated to their cholesterol-lowering activity that can be useful to control HIV-1 infection. METHODS/DESIGN: Randomized, double-blinded, placebo controlled, single-center, phase-II clinical trial. One hundred and ten chronically HIV-1-infected patients, older than 18 years and naïve for antirretroviral therapy (i.e., without prior or current management with antiretroviral drugs) will be enrolled at the outpatient services from the most important centres for health insurance care in Medellin-Colombia. The interventions will be lovastatin (40 mg/day, orally, for 12 months; 55 patients) or placebo (55 patients). Our primary aim will be to determine the effect of lovastatin on viral replication. The secondary aim will be to determine the effect of lovastatin on CD4+ T-cell count in peripheral blood. As tertiary aims we will explore differences in CD8+ T-cell count, expression of activation markers (CD38 and HLA-DR) on CD4 and CD8 T cells, cholesterol metabolism, LFA-1/ICAM-1 function, Rho GTPases function and clinical evolution between treated and not treated HIV-1-infected individuals. DISCUSSION: Preliminary descriptive studies have suggested that statins (lovastatin) may have anti HIV-1 activity and that their administration is safe, with the potential effect of controlling HIV-1 replication in chronically infected individuals who had not received antiretroviral medications. Considering that there is limited clinical data available on this topic, all these findings warrant further evaluation to determine if long-term administration of statins may benefit the virological and immunological evolution in HIV-1-infected individuals before the use of antiretroviral therapy is required. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registration number NCT00721305.
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spelling pubmed-27053672009-07-03 Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial Montoya, Carlos J Jaimes, Fabian Higuita, Edwin A Convers-Páez, Sandra Estrada, Santiago Gutierrez, Francisco Amariles, Pedro Giraldo, Newar Peñaloza, Cristina Rugeles, Maria T Trials Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Highly active antiretroviral therapy produces a significant decrease in HIV-1 replication and allows an increase in the CD4 T-cell count, leading to a decrease in the incidence of opportunistic infections and mortality. However, the cost, side effects and complexity of antiretroviral regimens have underscored the immediate need for additional therapeutic approaches. Statins exert pleiotropic effects through a variety of mechanisms, among which there are several immunoregulatory effects, related and unrelated to their cholesterol-lowering activity that can be useful to control HIV-1 infection. METHODS/DESIGN: Randomized, double-blinded, placebo controlled, single-center, phase-II clinical trial. One hundred and ten chronically HIV-1-infected patients, older than 18 years and naïve for antirretroviral therapy (i.e., without prior or current management with antiretroviral drugs) will be enrolled at the outpatient services from the most important centres for health insurance care in Medellin-Colombia. The interventions will be lovastatin (40 mg/day, orally, for 12 months; 55 patients) or placebo (55 patients). Our primary aim will be to determine the effect of lovastatin on viral replication. The secondary aim will be to determine the effect of lovastatin on CD4+ T-cell count in peripheral blood. As tertiary aims we will explore differences in CD8+ T-cell count, expression of activation markers (CD38 and HLA-DR) on CD4 and CD8 T cells, cholesterol metabolism, LFA-1/ICAM-1 function, Rho GTPases function and clinical evolution between treated and not treated HIV-1-infected individuals. DISCUSSION: Preliminary descriptive studies have suggested that statins (lovastatin) may have anti HIV-1 activity and that their administration is safe, with the potential effect of controlling HIV-1 replication in chronically infected individuals who had not received antiretroviral medications. Considering that there is limited clinical data available on this topic, all these findings warrant further evaluation to determine if long-term administration of statins may benefit the virological and immunological evolution in HIV-1-infected individuals before the use of antiretroviral therapy is required. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registration number NCT00721305. BioMed Central 2009-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2705367/ /pubmed/19538732 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-10-41 Text en Copyright © 2009 Montoya 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 Study Protocol
Montoya, Carlos J
Jaimes, Fabian
Higuita, Edwin A
Convers-Páez, Sandra
Estrada, Santiago
Gutierrez, Francisco
Amariles, Pedro
Giraldo, Newar
Peñaloza, Cristina
Rugeles, Maria T
Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial
title Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial
title_full Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial
title_fullStr Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial
title_full_unstemmed Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial
title_short Antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on HIV-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (The LIVE study): a phase-II randomized clinical trial
title_sort antiretroviral effect of lovastatin on hiv-1-infected individuals without highly active antiretroviral therapy (the live study): a phase-ii randomized clinical trial
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2705367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19538732
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-10-41
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