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      Two-drugvs. three-drug combinations for HIV-1: Do we have enough data to make the switch?

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          Defining total-body AIDS-virus burden with implications for curative strategies.

          In the quest for a functional cure or the eradication of HIV infection, it is necessary to know the sizes of the reservoirs from which infection rebounds after treatment interruption. Thus, we quantified SIV and HIV tissue burdens in tissues of infected nonhuman primates and lymphoid tissue (LT) biopsies from infected humans. Before antiretroviral therapy (ART), LTs contained >98% of the SIV RNA+and DNA+cells. With ART, the numbers of virus (v) RNA+ cells substantially decreased but remained detectable, and their persistence was associated with relatively lower drug concentrations in LT than in peripheral blood. Prolonged ART also decreased the levels of SIV- and HIV-DNA+cells, but the estimated size of the residual tissue burden of 108vDNA+cells potentially containing replication-competent proviruses, along with evidence of continuing virus production in LT despite ART, indicated two important sources for rebound following treatment interruption. The large sizes of these tissue reservoirs underscore challenges in developing 'HIV cure' strategies targeting multiple sources of virus production.
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            Efficacy, safety, and tolerability of dolutegravir-rilpivirine for the maintenance of virological suppression in adults with HIV-1: phase 3, randomised, non-inferiority SWORD-1 and SWORD-2 studies

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              Differences in HIV burden and immune activation within the gut of HIV-positive patients receiving suppressive antiretroviral therapy.

              The gut is a major reservoir for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART). We hypothesized that distinct immune environments within the gut may support varying levels of HIV. In 8 HIV-1-positive adults who were receiving ART and had CD4(+) T cell counts of >200 cells/μL and plasma viral loads of <40 copies/mL, levels of HIV and T cell activation were measured in blood samples and endoscopic biopsy specimens from the duodenum, ileum, ascending colon, and rectum. HIV DNA and RNA levels per CD4(+) T cell were higher in all 4 gut sites compared with those in the blood. HIV DNA levels increased from the duodenum to the rectum, whereas the median HIV RNA level peaked in the ileum. HIV DNA levels correlated positively with T cell activation markers in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) but negatively with T cell activation markers in the gut. Multiply spliced RNA was infrequently detected in gut, and ratios of unspliced RNA to DNA were lower in the colon and rectum than in PBMCs, which reflects paradoxically low HIV transcription, given the higher level of T cell activation in the gut. HIV DNA and RNA are both concentrated in the gut, but the inverse relationship between HIV DNA levels and T cell activation in the gut and the paradoxically low levels of HIV expression in the large bowel suggest that different processes drive HIV persistence in the blood and gut. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00884793 (PLUS1).
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                HIV Medicine
                HIV Med
                Wiley
                14642662
                April 2019
                April 2019
                March 01 2019
                : 20
                : 2-12
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Infectious Diseases; University Hospital Ramón y Cajal; Alcalá University; IRYCIS; Madrid Spain
                [2 ]Department of Laboratory Medicine; ASST Niguarda Hospital; University of Milan; Milan Italy
                [3 ]HIV Molecular Research Group; School of Medicine; University College Dublin; Dublin Ireland
                [4 ]Department for Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology; Hannover Medical School; Hannover Germany
                [5 ]Institute for Human Genetics; CNRS-Montpellier University UMR9002; Montpellier France
                [6 ]Immunology Department; University Hospital; Nîmes France
                [7 ]Division of Hematology and Chronic Viral Infection Service; McGill University Health Centre; Montréal QC Canada
                [8 ]Department of Infectious Diseases; Liege University Hospital; University of Liege; Liège Belgium
                Article
                10.1111/hiv.12716
                30821898
                e5a8edcf-ac9b-4116-82f3-85316eac3a4a
                © 2019

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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