aids clinical trial group
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2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea D. Raymond ◽  
Michelle J. Lang ◽  
Jane Chu ◽  
Tamika Campbell-Sims ◽  
Mahfuz Khan ◽  
...  

AbstractHuman Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) accessory protein Negative factor (Nef) is detected in the plasma of HIV+ individuals associated with exosomes. The role of Nef+ exosomes (exNef) in HIV pathogenesis is unknown. We perform a retrospective longitudinal analysis to determine correlative clinical associations of exNef plasma levels in ARV-treated HIV+ patients with or without immune recovery. exNef concentration in a subset of AIDS Clinical Trial Group (ACTG) 384 participants with successful virological suppression and with either high (Δ >100 CD4 cell recovery/High Immunological Responders (High-IR) or low (Δ ≤100 CD4 cell recovery/ Low Immunologic Responders (Low-IR) immunologic recovery was measured and compared for study weeks 48, 96, and 144. CD4 recovery showed a negative correlation with exNef at study week 144 (r = −0.3573, *p=.0366). Plasma exNef concentration in high IRs negatively correlated with naïve CD4 count and recovery (r = −0.3249, *p = 0. 0348 (High-IR); r =0.2981, *p= #0.0513 (Low-IR)). However, recovery of CD4 memory cells positively correlated with exNef (r =.4534, *p=.0358) in Low-IRs but not in High-IRs. Regimen A (Didanosine, Stavudine, Efavirenz) lowered exNef levels in IRs by 2-fold compared to other regimens. Nef+ exosomes persist in ART-treated HIV+ individuals despite undetectable viral loads, negatively correlates with naive and memory CD4 T cell restoration and may be associated with reduced immunological recovery. Taken together, these data suggest that exNef may represent a novel mechanism utilized by HIV to promote immune dysregulation.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. e0131001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline H. Shiboski ◽  
Huichao Chen ◽  
Rode Secours ◽  
Anthony Lee ◽  
Jennifer Webster-Cyriaque ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 682-688 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. H. Shiboski ◽  
H. Chen ◽  
M. A. Ghannoum ◽  
L. Komarow ◽  
S. Evans ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Alisa Stephens ◽  
Eric Tchetgen Tchetgen ◽  
Victor De Gruttola

AbstractSemiparametric methods have been developed to increase efficiency of inferences in randomized trials by incorporating baseline covariates. Locally efficient estimators of marginal treatment effects, which achieve minimum variance under an assumed model, are available for settings in which outcomes are independent. The value of the pursuit of locally efficient estimators in other settings, such as when outcomes are multivariate, is often debated. We derive and evaluate semiparametric locally efficient estimators of marginal mean treatment effects when outcomes are correlated; such outcomes occur in randomized studies with clustered or repeated-measures responses. The resulting estimating equations modify existing generalized estimating equations (GEE) by identifying the efficient score under a mean model for marginal effects when data contain baseline covariates. Locally efficient estimators are implemented for longitudinal data with continuous outcomes and clustered data with binary outcomes. Methods are illustrated through application to AIDS Clinical Trial Group Study 398, a longitudinal randomized clinical trial that compared the effects of various protease inhibitors in HIV-positive subjects who had experienced antiretroviral therapy failure. In addition, extensive simulation studies characterize settings in which locally efficient estimators result in efficiency gains over suboptimal estimators and assess their feasibility in practice.


2012 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 682-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lígia Mara Dolce de Lemos ◽  
Thaísa Fonseca Siqueira Rocha ◽  
Marcos Vinícius da Conceição ◽  
Eduardo de Lemos Silva ◽  
Alessandro Henrique da Silva Santos ◽  
...  

INTRODUCTION: The main route of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in children is from mother to child. The preventive measures established for the Aids Clinical Trial Group protocol 076 (ACTG 076) significantly reduces HIV vertical transmission rates. This study aims to evaluate the implementation of the ACTG 076 protocol in the maternity units of State of Sergipe, Brazilian northeast. METHODS: This is a descriptive, retrospective study with a quantitative approach, with HIV positive women and children exposed, attending a Maternity reference for high-risk pregnancies. Data were obtained from patient records registered in the years 1994 to 2010. RESULTS: Amongst the 110 pregnant women and exposed newborns, the ACTG 076 protocol was fully utilized in only 31.8% of the participants. During the prenatal period, zidovudine (ZDV) was taken by 79.1% of the pregnant women. Only 49.1% of HIV seropositive patients used ZDV during delivery. Two (1.8%) children were considered infected and 50 (45.5%) do not have a conclusive diagnosis to date. CONCLUSIONS: There were significant deficiencies in the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV, including lack of compliance with the three phases of the ACTG 076 protocol; inadequacies in prenatal care; inappropriate mode of delivery and lack of adequate follow up of exposed children.


AIDS ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 398-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Gervasoni ◽  
Dario Cattaneo

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olajumoke Oshinaike ◽  
Akinsegun Akinbami ◽  
Oluwadamilola Ojo ◽  
Anthonia Ogbera ◽  
Njideka Okubadejo ◽  
...  

Background. Sensory neuropathy (SN) is one of the most common AIDS-associated neurologic disorders especially in the era of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of SN among highly-active-antiretroviral-therapy- (HAART-) experienced and HAART-naïve HIV-positive individuals and to investigate the relationship to demographic, clinical, and laboratory factors.Methods. 323 patients with HIV infection (142 on HAART and 181 HAART naïve) were enrolled in a cross-sectional neuropathy screening program. Data was collected using structured questionnaires which contained the brief peripheral neuropathy screening tool of AIDS Clinical Trial Group protocol. Neuropathy was defined by the presence of at least 1 clinical sign in a distal, symmetrical pattern. Patients were classified as symptomatic if they described aching, stabbing, or burning pain, paresthesia, or numbness in a similar distribution. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory details were documented as risk factors.Result. The prevalence of sensory neuropathy was 39.0% (126/323), (of which 29/126 (23%)) were symptomatic. Amongst those on HAART, 60/142 (42.3%) had SN compared to 66/181 (36.5%) HAART-naïve individuals (P=0.29). On multivariate analyses, the independent associations with SN were increasing age (P=0.03) and current exposure to stavudine (P=0.00). Gender (P=0.99) height (P=0.07) use of HAART (P=0.50), duration of HAART treatment (P=0.10), and lower CD4 count (P=0.12) were not associated with an increased SN risk.Conclusion. HIV SN remains common despite improved immunologic function associated with HAART and decreased neurotoxic HAART use. In this cross-sectional analysis, age and stavudine-based therapies were the independent risk factors.


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