HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
Imaging Companion Study To ACTG A5314: Effect of Reducing Inflammation With Low Dose Methotrexate on Inflammatory Markers and Endothelial Function in Treated and Suppressed HIV Infection
HIV-infected individuals on antiretroviral therapy (ART) are at increased risk for
cardiovascular disease (CVD), likely due to chronically increased inflammation. Low-dose
methotrexate (LDMTX) may reduce CVD risk in people with rheumatoid arthritis, who like those
with HIV, have increased levels of inflammation. The NHLBI is funding a clinical trial
targeting the excess inflammation in HIV. That "Parent Study" is a randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled trial (NCT01949116) that will assess whether 24-week treatment with LDMTX:
i) is safe, ii) reduces circulating inflammatory biomarkers and levels of immune cell
activation and iii) improves brachial artery reactivity. However, neither the biomarkers nor
endothelial function tests measured as part of the parent study will report on
atherosclerotic inflammation, (the desired pathobiological target of LDMTX therapy in HIV).
As such, the direct evaluation of arterial inflammation would substantially enhance the
scientific value of the trial. In this imaging sub-study, the overall goal is to determine if
treating virologically suppressed, HIV-infected individuals with LDMTX will reduce
inflammation within the arterial wall.
This fully integrated ancillary study would, in a subset of patients enrolled in the parent
trial: (i) assess the impact of LDMTX on arterial inflammation, (ii) evaluate mechanisms
responsible for arterial inflammation in HIV and iii) explore mechanisms responsible for
actions of LDMTX on the artery wall. Accordingly, the proposed study would provide unique and
highly complementary information that would greatly increase the knowledge and mechanistic
insights gained from Parent Study. The ancillary study has two specific aims1) To determine
the impact of anti-inflammatory treatment with LDMTX on arterial inflammation, as assessed by
FDG-PET/CT imaging, in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals., and 2) To evaluate the
cellular and biochemical basis of the effect of LDMTX therapy on arterial inflammation in
HIV.
HIV infection is associated with a substantially increased risk of CVD that is not fully
accounted for by traditional risk factors. Several lines of evidence suggest that chronic
immune cell activation may be complicit. In support of this concept, we recently used
18F-FDG-PET/CT to demonstrate that HIV-infected individuals have increased arterial
inflammation compared to non-HIV, FRS-matched controls and that the degree of arterial
inflammation is related to markers of monocyte activation. Further, we and others have shown
that increased arterial FDG uptake predicts future CVD events in non-HIV cohorts. Together,
these observations support the concept that targeting arterial inflammation may provide
benefit for HIV infected individuals.
The NHLBI recently provided funding for a clinical trial targeting the excess inflammation in
HIV. The "Parent Study" is being performed as a collaboration with the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) AIDS Clinical Trials Group and the NHLBI. That
randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial will assess whether 24-week treatment with
very low-dose methotrexate (LDMTX): i) is safe, ii) reduces levels of circulating
inflammatory biomarkers and activated immune cells and iii) improves brachial artery
reactivity (BART). However, neither the biomarkers nor the BART studies measured as part of
Parent Study will report on atherosclerotic inflammation, (the desired pathobiological target
of LDMTX therapy in HIV). As such, the direct evaluation of arterial inflammation would
substantially enhance the scientific value of the Parent Study.
Atherosclerotic inflammation can be non-invasively and reproducibly measured with FDG-PET/CT
imaging, a well-validated quantitative technique that can sensitively detect changes in
atherosclerotic inflammation. FDG-PET/CT imaging has been employed in several multi-center
trials to measure changes in arterial inflammation in response to anti-inflammatory
treatments. Accordingly, we propose a time sensitive ancillary imaging study to determine if
treating virologically suppressed, HIV-infected individuals with LDMTX reduces
atherosclerotic inflammation, assessed by FDG-PET/CT. Our central hypothesis is that
persistent immune cell activation results in chronic arterial inflammation, which
subsequently contributes to the CVD risk observed in HIV. This fully integrated ancillary
study would, in a subset of patients enrolled in the parent trial: (i) assess the impact of
LDMTX on arterial inflammation, and (ii) identify the immune cell subtypes whose changes
(with LDMTX) are associated with changes in arterial inflammation. Accordingly, the proposed
ancillary study would provide unique and highly complementary information that would greatly
increase the knowledge and mechanistic insights gained from the Parent Study. The ancillary
study has two specific aims:
Specific Aim 1: To determine the impact of anti-inflammatory treatment with LDMTX on arterial
inflammation, as assessed by FDG-PET/CT imaging, in virally suppressed HIV-infected
individuals. [Primary and secondary outcomes]
Knowledge Gap/Need: The parent study does not provide for assessment of the target pathology
(arterial inflammation) hence insights regarding effects of LDMTX treatment on arterial
inflammation are needed.
Hypothesis 1: LDMTX therapy will reduce arterial inflammation (to a greater extent than
placebo).
To test hypothesis 1: We will determine in 91 patients (a subset of the parent study) if
arterial inflammation (measured with PET/CT at 0 and 24 weeks) is reduced by LDMTX (relative
to placebo).
Specific Aim 2: To evaluate the cellular and biochemical mediators associated with arterial
inflammation in HIV and to explore the potential mechanism of the effect of LDMTX therapy on
arterial inflammation in HIV. [Exploratory outcomes]
Knowledge Gap/Need: The parent study, on its own, does not provide the tools to directly
evaluate arterial inflammation in HIV. Evaluation of the relationships between circulating
inflammatory mediators and arterial inflammation in the context of this study would yeild
mechanistic insights regarding atherosclerotic disease in HIV and provide a greater
understanding of the effect of LDMTX on arterial inflammation in HIV.
Hypothesis 2.1:At baseline, arterial inflammation is closely associated with measures of
activated immune cells (CD14+/CD16+ monocytes). Additional relationships might be seen
between arterial inflammation and other cellular subsets (e.g. T-cells), inflammatory
cytokines, and endothelial function.
Hypothesis 2.2: Post-treatment changes in arterial inflammation are positively correlated
with changes in measures of activated immune cells (especially activated monocytes).
To test these hypotheses: We will evaluate if arterial inflammation (by PET) correlates with
inflammatory cell activation and other measured biomarkers separately. We will then compare
the strength of the associations and test their independence. The evaluation of associations
will be performed: comparing baseline measurements (SA 2.1), and comparing post-randomization
changes (SA2.2).
We expect that LDMTX therapy will improve arterial inflammation and that this mechanistic,
proof-of-concept study will demonstrate the importance of inflammation and immune activation
in HIV. This would thus form the basis for event-driven trials to evaluate whether
anti-inflammatory strategies reduce CVD risk in individuals with treated HIV infection.
Accordingly, the study has the potential to shift the paradigm in the approach to treating
atherosclerosis in HIV-infected individuals, and potentially in other populations as well.
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