Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
An Observational Cohort Study of Adipose Tissue and Immune Activation in Treated HIV Infection
The prevalence of HIV-associated wasting declined dramatically with the introduction of
effective antiretroviral therapy (ART), but as patients survive longer on treatment the
proportion of overweight (body mass index [BMI] >25 kg/m2) and obese (BMI >30 kg/m2)
HIV-infected individuals has been rising over time and is reaching parity with the general
population. Adipose tissue has broad effects on immune function relevant to HIV infection,
including the basal inflammatory state and peripheral lymphocyte populations, but there are
few data on the effects of high adiposity on HIV immunology. This issue is directly relevant
to promoting the long-term health of ART-treated individuals, many of which can now survive
for decades on treatment, as emerging evidence suggests that increased immune activation is a
major risk factor for the development of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases in this
population. HIV-infected individuals on ART have an approximately 2-fold higher risk of
myocardial infarction and a 4-fold higher risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus, and the
proportion of deaths among HIV-infected individuals due to non-AIDS conditions now exceeds
those due to AIDS.
Despite the increasing proportion of overweight and obese HIV-infected persons, few prior
studies have investigated the interaction between adipose tissue, immune activation, and risk
factors for cardiovascular and metabolic disease in treated HIV. The overall goal of this
study is to understand the complex relationships between adipose tissue, innate and cellular
immune activation, and metabolic and cardiovascular disease risk factors in persons on
long-term antiretroviral therapy. To this end, we will use an observational, cross-sectional
cohort design to compare in vivo markers of immune activation, ex vivo cytokine expression,
and metabolic and cardiovascular disease markers in HIV-infected individuals with a range of
body composition profiles and between overweight/obese HIV-infected and uninfected
individuals.
HIV-infected individuals on long-term ART treatment are at increased risk for many diseases,
particularly diabetes mellitus and coronary artery disease, which are more commonly
associated with obesity and a sedentary lifestyle. As HIV patients are now living longer on
effective treatment, a growing proportion are becoming overweight and obese, and the
management of non-AIDS chronic diseases associated is emerging as a major challenge to
clinicians and the health care system. Excess adiposity (i.e., being overweight or obese) and
treated HIV infection are associated with strikingly similar alterations in inflammatory
biomarkers and cellular immune function implicated in the pathogenesis of chronic diseases,
but there are few data at present on whether the effects of obesity and treated HIV are
synergistic or additive. In this study we will closely investigate the effects of adipose
tissue on both the innate and cellular arms of the immune system, and the relationships
between adiposity, immune function, and risk factors for metabolic and cardiovascular
diseases.
Heightened, chronic systemic inflammation is an important contributor to non-AIDS related
morbidity and mortality among patients on ART, and treated HIV and obesity may promote
increased metabolic and cardiovascular disease through similar mechanisms. Elevated serum
highly-sensitive C-reactive protein (hsCRP; a more sensitive serum CRP assay used to measure
inflammation), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and other innate immune-derived inflammatory markers are
independently associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events, insulin resistance,
and all-cause death among HIV-infected individuals. The etiology of this HIV-associated
inflammation is not fully understood and likely multifactorial, but serum hsCRP and several
proinflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL-6, TNF-α receptor 1) correlate with fat mass in
HIV-infected adults, suggesting adipose tissue may have a role in modulating the inflammatory
response.
In addition to greater inflammation, abdominal obesity is associated with altered T cell
function, characterized by increased circulating markers of cellular immune activation (e.g.,
sCD25 and neopterin), and adipose tissue biopsies from obese individuals and animal models
contain higher numbers of resident macrophages, T cells (particularly CD8+ cells) and reduced
T-regulatory cells. Furthermore, adipokines (hormones produced by adipocytes), demonstrate a
range of lymphocyte effects. Leptin, in particular, enhances expression of T cell activation
markers after PHA stimulation, polarizes naïve CD4+ T cell proliferation towards the Th1
phenotype, and promotes Th1 cytokine production. These in vitro data are consistent with
obesity modulating T cell activation, at least in part through adipokine effects.
The goal of this study is to understand the complex relationships between adipose tissue,
innate and cellular immune activation, and metabolic and cardiovascular disease risk factors
in persons on long-term antiretroviral therapy. Using the facilities and resources of the
Vanderbilt Clinical Research Center, we will enroll an observational cohort to investigate
the interactions of innate immune activation, metabolic and cardiovascular risk factors, and
T cell activation among HIV-infected and uninfected adults with a range of body composition
profiles from low adiposity (lean) to high adiposity (obese). The study groups will be
comprised of 70 HIV-infected adults on ART with a range of body composition profiles from low
adiposity (lean) to high adiposity (obese), and a control group of 30 overweight and obese
uninfected individuals.
Hypothesis 1: Increased adipose tissue promotes increased innate and cellular immune
activation in HIV-infected individuals on long-term ART.
Specific Aim 1a: To study the hypothesis that adipose tissue promotes innate immune
activation in treated HIV by determining if serum leptin (a marker of adiposity) is
positively associated with interleukin-6 (IL-6) levels, in addition to other inflammation
biomarkers (including C-reactive protein), in HIV-infected persons on long-term ART with a
range of body composition profiles from low adiposity (lean) to high adiposity (obese).
Specific Aim 1b: To study the hypothesis that adipose tissue promotes cellular immune
activation in treated HIV by determining if serum leptin is positively associated with the
percentage of CD8+ T cells expressing CD38 and HLA-DR activation markers in HIV-infected
persons on long-term ART.
Hypothesis 2: Overweight and obese HIV-infected individuals on long-term ART have
significantly greater markers of innate and cellular immune activation compared to uninfected
individuals with equivalent adiposity.
Specific Aim 2a: To determine if IL-6 serum levels, and other inflammation biomarkers, are
significantly higher among overweight/obese HIV-infected persons compared to uninfected
controls with equivalent adiposity.
Specific Aim 2b: To determine if the percentage of CD38+ and HLA-DR+ CD8+ T cells is
significantly higher among overweight/obese HIV-infected persons compared to uninfected
controls with equivalent adiposity.
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