14 Adult Patients in Long Term Functional Remission of HIV After Treatment

HIV Immune Cell

An immune cell infected with HIV. Credit: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

A newly published study reports on fourteen adult patients in long-term functional remission of HIV seven years after being taken off early antiretroviral treatment.

The work published today in PLoS Pathogens describes the control of HIV infection after early treatment of 14 patients who have been off therapy for 7.5 years (the cohort ANRS EP47 VISCONTI). This work suggests on a larger and durable scale what the functionally cured “Mississippi baby” case potentially indicates: that early therapeutic intervention may be instrumental in HIV control and has important implications for HIV cure research.

It is known that following acute infection, HIV establishes viral reservoirs in long-lived cells which allow its persistence even after prolonged treatment. As a consequence, viral replication readily restarts at pretreatment levels upon treatment interruption in most patients.

However, few patients treated very early in primary infection are able to control infection after treatment interruption. The initial observation of patients controlling HIV was made in France by Dr Laurent Hocqueloux (Orleans-La Source Hospital) and in the ANRS CO06 PRIMO cohort (this cohort is a long term survey of newly infected patients). The ANRS decided in 2009 to set-up and fund a multidisciplinary team of researchers and to assemble a cohort of such patients to characterize this phenomenon. The ANRS EP 47 VISCONTI cohort (Viro-Immunologic Sustained COntrol after Treatment Interruption) is a group of 14 patients who have maintained virological control of their HIV infection for a median time of 7.5 years after the interruption of antiretroviral therapy. All these patients were diagnosed during primary infection and were immediately treated (within ten weeks after infection) with antiretroviral drugs, for a median time of three years before treatment discontinuation. The ANRS EP 47 VISCONTI study is coordinated by Prof. Christine Rouzioux (Necker Hospital and University Paris Descartes, Paris), member of the initial team who identified HIV 30 years ago, and Dr. Asier Sáez-Cirión (Institut Pasteur, Paris), senior researcher in the lab of HIV co-discoverer and Nobel Prize Laureate Pr. Françoise Barré-Sinoussi.

There is an immensely valuable store of knowledge to be gained from analyzing the immunological and genetic characteristics for these patients. Preliminary data presented last year by Charline Bacchus (Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital, Inserm Unit U945) at the XIXth International AIDS conference in Washington DC have shown that the ANRS EP 47 VISCONTI patients showed very low levels of HIV reservoirs, similar to those of natural HIV Controllers (patients who never received any treatment, remain asymptomatic and spontaneously control viral replication for many years)*. The results published in PloS Pathogens today show that the number of infected cells circulating in the blood of some of these “post-treatment controllers” keeps decreasing in the absence of treatment over the last four years. The shrinking of viral reservoirs while maintaining controlled viremia in these individuals closely match the definition of “functional” cure. Pr. Rouzioux explains “Early treatment in these patients may have limited the establishment of viral reservoirs, the extent of viral mutations and preserve immune responses. A combination of those may contribute to control infection in post-treatment controllers.”

A study presented at last week´s Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Atlanta showed that a baby infected with HIV in utero who was treated within 30 hours of birth and for 18 months had been able to control infection for 6 months.

“As in the case with the “Mississippi baby,” early treatment initiation does not allow us to evaluate whether the VISCONTI post-treatment controllers might have naturally achieved control of infection,” said Sáez-Cirión. “However, most of them do not exhibit the favorable genetic background found in natural HIV controllers and do not develop the same immune responses associated with control of infection in the latter. Moreover, whereas natural HIV controllers typically start controlling infection in primary infection, most post-treatment controllers were strongly symptomatic during this period, with levels of virus in the plasma high and similar to those of patients who will not control infection.”

Although most patients will not be able to control HIV, the data presented in the ANRS EP 47 VISCONTI and the Mississippi study strongly support early treatment initiation and may hold important clues for the development of a strategy to cure HIV or at least, induce a long-term control without the need of antiretroviral treatment. “Current efforts are focused in understanding why only a fraction of patients treated in primary infection are able to control infection and what are the mechanisms responsible for viral control in these post-treatment controllers. A European cohort constituted of Post-treatment Controller patients will start in the next few months, coordinated by the ANRS,” says Pr Jean-François Delfraissy, Director of the ANRS.

Reference: “Post-Treatment HIV-1 Controllers with a Long-Term Virological Remission after the Interruption of Early Initiated Antiretroviral Therapy ANRS VISCONTI Study” by Asier Sáez-Cirión, Charline Bacchus, Laurent Hocqueloux, Véronique Avettand-Fenoel, Isabelle Girault, Camille Lecuroux, Valerie Potard, Pierre Versmisse, Adeline Melard, Thierry Prazuck, Benjamin Descours, Julien Guergnon, Jean-Paul Viard, Faroudy Boufassa, Olivier Lambotte, Cécile Goujard, Laurence Meyer, Dominique Costagliola, Alain Venet, Gianfranco Pancino, Brigitte Autran, Christine Rouzioux and the ANRS VISCONTI Study Group, 14 March 2013, PLoS Pathogens.
DOI:10.1371/journal.ppat.1003211

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