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Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc

INTRODUCTION: Cenicriviroc (CVC), a once-daily, dual CCR5/CCR2 co-receptor antagonist, has completed Phase 2b development. CVC demonstrated favourable safety and similar efficacy compared with efavirenz (EFV) in Study 202 (NCT01338883); an ex vivo sub-analysis evaluated treatment effects on HIV entr...

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Autores principales: Kramer, Victor, Hassounah, Said, Colby-Germinario, Susan, Mesplède, Thibault, Lefebvre, Eric, Wainberg, Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4224821/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25394040
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.4.19531
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author Kramer, Victor
Hassounah, Said
Colby-Germinario, Susan
Mesplède, Thibault
Lefebvre, Eric
Wainberg, Mark
author_facet Kramer, Victor
Hassounah, Said
Colby-Germinario, Susan
Mesplède, Thibault
Lefebvre, Eric
Wainberg, Mark
author_sort Kramer, Victor
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Cenicriviroc (CVC), a once-daily, dual CCR5/CCR2 co-receptor antagonist, has completed Phase 2b development. CVC demonstrated favourable safety and similar efficacy compared with efavirenz (EFV) in Study 202 (NCT01338883); an ex vivo sub-analysis evaluated treatment effects on HIV entry, measured by intracellular HIV DNA declines, in subjects with virologic success at Week 24. In addition, in vitro assays determined and compared the extent of any cell-free virion redistribution that CVC or maraviroc (MVC) may cause. METHODS: Ex vivo: intracellular DNA (frozen PBMCs) from 30 subjects with virologic success at Week 24 (10, 13 and 7 subjects on CVC 100 mg, CVC 200 mg and EFV, respectively). Early (strong-stop) and late (full-length) reverse transcript levels were measured by qPCR. In vitro: PM-1 cells were infected with CCR5-tropic HIV-1 BaL in the presence or absence of inhibitory concentrations of CVC (20 nM), MVC (50 nM) or controls. P24 and viral load levels were measured by ELISA and qRT-PCR after 4 hours. RESULTS: Ex vivo analysis showed full-length HIV DNA declines were similar across all groups (CVC 100 mg, CVC 200 mg and EFV) at Week 24. Strong-stop HIV DNA declines (a marker of HIV entry) at Week 24 were pronounced for both CVC arms (CVC 100 mg, 51% decline; CVC 200 mg, 37% decline) compared to no decline for the EFV arm. In vitro experiments revealed that CVC-treated cells had lower levels of supernatant P24 at 4 hours versus baseline (0 hrs: 506 ng/mL; 4 hrs: 192 ng/mL), but P24 levels remained constant for MVC-treated cells after 4 hours (0 hrs: 506 ng/mL; 4 hrs: 520 ng/mL). Viral load levels for CVC-treated cells remained stable after 4 hours (0 hrs: 1.19×10(10) copies/mL; 4 hrs: 1.26×10(10) copies/mL). MVC-treated cells exhibited a slight increase in viral load after 4 hours (0 hrs: 1.19×10(10) copies/mL; 4 hrs: 1.67×10(10) copies/mL). CONCLUSIONS: Ex vivo analysis confirmed that CVC treatment blocks HIV entry (strong-stop HIV DNA declines), while in vitro analysis showed that CVC-treated cells do not repel virus back into the extracellular space, as seen with MVC. Experiments are underway to determine whether or not interactions between CVC and HIV at the binding site may explain these unanticipated findings.
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spelling pubmed-42248212014-11-13 Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc Kramer, Victor Hassounah, Said Colby-Germinario, Susan Mesplède, Thibault Lefebvre, Eric Wainberg, Mark J Int AIDS Soc Oral Presentation – Abstract O433 INTRODUCTION: Cenicriviroc (CVC), a once-daily, dual CCR5/CCR2 co-receptor antagonist, has completed Phase 2b development. CVC demonstrated favourable safety and similar efficacy compared with efavirenz (EFV) in Study 202 (NCT01338883); an ex vivo sub-analysis evaluated treatment effects on HIV entry, measured by intracellular HIV DNA declines, in subjects with virologic success at Week 24. In addition, in vitro assays determined and compared the extent of any cell-free virion redistribution that CVC or maraviroc (MVC) may cause. METHODS: Ex vivo: intracellular DNA (frozen PBMCs) from 30 subjects with virologic success at Week 24 (10, 13 and 7 subjects on CVC 100 mg, CVC 200 mg and EFV, respectively). Early (strong-stop) and late (full-length) reverse transcript levels were measured by qPCR. In vitro: PM-1 cells were infected with CCR5-tropic HIV-1 BaL in the presence or absence of inhibitory concentrations of CVC (20 nM), MVC (50 nM) or controls. P24 and viral load levels were measured by ELISA and qRT-PCR after 4 hours. RESULTS: Ex vivo analysis showed full-length HIV DNA declines were similar across all groups (CVC 100 mg, CVC 200 mg and EFV) at Week 24. Strong-stop HIV DNA declines (a marker of HIV entry) at Week 24 were pronounced for both CVC arms (CVC 100 mg, 51% decline; CVC 200 mg, 37% decline) compared to no decline for the EFV arm. In vitro experiments revealed that CVC-treated cells had lower levels of supernatant P24 at 4 hours versus baseline (0 hrs: 506 ng/mL; 4 hrs: 192 ng/mL), but P24 levels remained constant for MVC-treated cells after 4 hours (0 hrs: 506 ng/mL; 4 hrs: 520 ng/mL). Viral load levels for CVC-treated cells remained stable after 4 hours (0 hrs: 1.19×10(10) copies/mL; 4 hrs: 1.26×10(10) copies/mL). MVC-treated cells exhibited a slight increase in viral load after 4 hours (0 hrs: 1.19×10(10) copies/mL; 4 hrs: 1.67×10(10) copies/mL). CONCLUSIONS: Ex vivo analysis confirmed that CVC treatment blocks HIV entry (strong-stop HIV DNA declines), while in vitro analysis showed that CVC-treated cells do not repel virus back into the extracellular space, as seen with MVC. Experiments are underway to determine whether or not interactions between CVC and HIV at the binding site may explain these unanticipated findings. International AIDS Society 2014-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4224821/ /pubmed/25394040 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.4.19531 Text en © 2014 Kramer V et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Oral Presentation – Abstract O433
Kramer, Victor
Hassounah, Said
Colby-Germinario, Susan
Mesplède, Thibault
Lefebvre, Eric
Wainberg, Mark
Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc
title Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc
title_full Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc
title_fullStr Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc
title_full_unstemmed Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc
title_short Cenicriviroc blocks HIV entry but does not lead to redistribution of HIV into extracellular space like maraviroc
title_sort cenicriviroc blocks hiv entry but does not lead to redistribution of hiv into extracellular space like maraviroc
topic Oral Presentation – Abstract O433
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4224821/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25394040
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.17.4.19531
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