Valproic acid without intensified antiviral therapy has limited impact on persistent HIV infection of resting CD4+ T cells

Valproic acid and intensified antiretroviral therapy may deplete resting CD4+ T-cell HIV infection. We tested the ability of valproic acid to deplete resting CD4+ T-cell infection in patients receiving standard antiretroviral therapy. Resting CD4+ T-cell infection was measured in 11 stably aviremic...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS (London) 2008-06, Vol.22 (10), p.1131-1135
Hauptverfasser: ARCHIN, Nancy M, ERON, Joseph J, COFFIN, John M, MARGOLIS, David M, PALMER, Sarah, HARTMANN-DUFF, Anne, MARTINSON, Jeffery A, WIEGAND, Ann, BANDARENKO, Nicholas, SCHMITZ, John L, BOSCH, Ronald J, LANDAY, Alan L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Valproic acid and intensified antiretroviral therapy may deplete resting CD4+ T-cell HIV infection. We tested the ability of valproic acid to deplete resting CD4+ T-cell infection in patients receiving standard antiretroviral therapy. Resting CD4+ T-cell infection was measured in 11 stably aviremic volunteers twice prior to, and twice after Depakote ER 1000 mg was added to standard antiretroviral therapy. Resting CD4+ T-cell infection frequency was measured by outgrowth assay. Low-level viremia was quantitated by single copy plasma HIV RNA assay. A decrease in resting CD4+ T-cell infection was observed in only four of the 11 patients. Levels of immune activation and HIV-specific T-cell response were low and stable. Valproic acid levels ranged from 26 to 96 microg/ml when measured near trough. Single copy assay was performed in nine patients. In three patients with depletion of resting CD4+ T-cell infection following valproic acid, single copy assay ranged from less than 1-5 copies/ml. Continuous low-level viremia was observed in three patients with stable resting CD4+ T-cell infection (24-87, 8-87, and 1-7 copies/ml respectively) in whom multiple samples were analyzed. The prospective addition of valproic acid to stable antiretroviral therapy reduced the frequency of resting CD4+ T-cell infection in a minority of volunteers. In patients in whom resting CD4+ T-cell infection depletion was observed, viremia was rarely detectable by single copy assay.
ISSN:0269-9370
1473-5571
DOI:10.1097/QAD.0b013e3282fd6df4