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Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection

BACKGROUND: Personal lubricant use is common during anal intercourse. Some water-based products with high osmolality and low pH can damage genital and rectal tissues, and the polymer polyquaternium 15 (PQ15) can enhance HIV replication in vitro. This has raised concerns that lubricants with such pro...

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Autores principales: Vishwanathan, Sundaram A., Morris, Monica R., Wolitski, Richard J., Luo, Wei, Rose, Charles E., Blau, Dianna M., Tsegaye, Theodros, Zaki, Sherif R., Garber, David A., Jenkins, Leecresia T., Henning, Tara C., Patton, Dorothy L., Hendry, R. Michael, McNicholl, Janet M., Kersh, Ellen N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4390343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25853710
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120021
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author Vishwanathan, Sundaram A.
Morris, Monica R.
Wolitski, Richard J.
Luo, Wei
Rose, Charles E.
Blau, Dianna M.
Tsegaye, Theodros
Zaki, Sherif R.
Garber, David A.
Jenkins, Leecresia T.
Henning, Tara C.
Patton, Dorothy L.
Hendry, R. Michael
McNicholl, Janet M.
Kersh, Ellen N.
author_facet Vishwanathan, Sundaram A.
Morris, Monica R.
Wolitski, Richard J.
Luo, Wei
Rose, Charles E.
Blau, Dianna M.
Tsegaye, Theodros
Zaki, Sherif R.
Garber, David A.
Jenkins, Leecresia T.
Henning, Tara C.
Patton, Dorothy L.
Hendry, R. Michael
McNicholl, Janet M.
Kersh, Ellen N.
author_sort Vishwanathan, Sundaram A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Personal lubricant use is common during anal intercourse. Some water-based products with high osmolality and low pH can damage genital and rectal tissues, and the polymer polyquaternium 15 (PQ15) can enhance HIV replication in vitro. This has raised concerns that lubricants with such properties may increase STD/HIV infection risk, although in vivo evidence is scarce. We use a macaque model to evaluate rectal cytotoxicity and SHIV infection risk after use of a highly osmolar (>8,000 mOsm/kg) water-based lubricant with pH of 4.4, and containing PQ15. METHODS: Cytotoxicity was documented by measuring inflammatory cytokines and epithelial tissue sloughing during six weeks of repeated, non-traumatic lubricant or control buffer applications to rectum and anus. We measured susceptibility to SHIV(SF162P3) infection by comparing virus doses needed for rectal infection in twenty-one macaques treated with lubricant or control buffer 30 minutes prior to virus exposure. RESULTS: Lubricant increased pro-inflammatory cytokines and tissue sloughing while control buffer (phosphate buffered saline; PBS) did not. However, the estimated AID(50) (50% animal infectious dose) was not different in lubricant- and control buffer-treated macaques (p = 0.4467; logistic regression models). CONCLUSIONS: Although the test lubricant caused acute cytotoxicity in rectal tissues, it did not increase susceptibility to infection in this macaque model. Thus neither the lubricant-induced type/extent of inflammation nor the presence of PQ15 affected infection risk. This study constitutes a first step in the in vivo evaluation of lubricants with regards to HIV transmission.
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spelling pubmed-43903432015-04-21 Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection Vishwanathan, Sundaram A. Morris, Monica R. Wolitski, Richard J. Luo, Wei Rose, Charles E. Blau, Dianna M. Tsegaye, Theodros Zaki, Sherif R. Garber, David A. Jenkins, Leecresia T. Henning, Tara C. Patton, Dorothy L. Hendry, R. Michael McNicholl, Janet M. Kersh, Ellen N. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Personal lubricant use is common during anal intercourse. Some water-based products with high osmolality and low pH can damage genital and rectal tissues, and the polymer polyquaternium 15 (PQ15) can enhance HIV replication in vitro. This has raised concerns that lubricants with such properties may increase STD/HIV infection risk, although in vivo evidence is scarce. We use a macaque model to evaluate rectal cytotoxicity and SHIV infection risk after use of a highly osmolar (>8,000 mOsm/kg) water-based lubricant with pH of 4.4, and containing PQ15. METHODS: Cytotoxicity was documented by measuring inflammatory cytokines and epithelial tissue sloughing during six weeks of repeated, non-traumatic lubricant or control buffer applications to rectum and anus. We measured susceptibility to SHIV(SF162P3) infection by comparing virus doses needed for rectal infection in twenty-one macaques treated with lubricant or control buffer 30 minutes prior to virus exposure. RESULTS: Lubricant increased pro-inflammatory cytokines and tissue sloughing while control buffer (phosphate buffered saline; PBS) did not. However, the estimated AID(50) (50% animal infectious dose) was not different in lubricant- and control buffer-treated macaques (p = 0.4467; logistic regression models). CONCLUSIONS: Although the test lubricant caused acute cytotoxicity in rectal tissues, it did not increase susceptibility to infection in this macaque model. Thus neither the lubricant-induced type/extent of inflammation nor the presence of PQ15 affected infection risk. This study constitutes a first step in the in vivo evaluation of lubricants with regards to HIV transmission. Public Library of Science 2015-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4390343/ /pubmed/25853710 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120021 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vishwanathan, Sundaram A.
Morris, Monica R.
Wolitski, Richard J.
Luo, Wei
Rose, Charles E.
Blau, Dianna M.
Tsegaye, Theodros
Zaki, Sherif R.
Garber, David A.
Jenkins, Leecresia T.
Henning, Tara C.
Patton, Dorothy L.
Hendry, R. Michael
McNicholl, Janet M.
Kersh, Ellen N.
Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection
title Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection
title_full Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection
title_fullStr Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection
title_full_unstemmed Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection
title_short Rectal Application of a Highly Osmolar Personal Lubricant in a Macaque Model Induces Acute Cytotoxicity but Does Not Increase Risk of SHIV Infection
title_sort rectal application of a highly osmolar personal lubricant in a macaque model induces acute cytotoxicity but does not increase risk of shiv infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4390343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25853710
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120021
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