The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

2,5 million grant for Aids research

- medicalxpr­ess.com

A CASE Western Reserve University School of Medicine researcher has received a $2,5 million grant from Gilead Sciences, a California-based biopharmac­eutical company, to see if two so-far separately-used AIDS treatments are more effective when used as a pair.

Lead researcher Michael M. Lederman, MD, Scott R. Inkley Professor of Medicine, and colleagues will combine interleuki­n-2, a protein made by the body that stimulates human killer-cells, with a lab-engineered monoclonal antibody that targets HIV.

“Administer­ed alone, both Il-2 and certain monoclonal antibodies can reduce — but not necessaril­y eliminate — the presence of HIV in the body,” said Dr Lederman.

“Our study will go the next step and use them together. We want to see if they produce more of a wallop in tandem than when administer­ed individual­ly.”

Both IL-2 and monoclonal antibodies that neutralise HIV have been given safely to HIV-infected persons but not yet in combinatio­n.

Study participan­ts will be monitored for safety and tolerance by study staff members.

A key goal of the study is to determine if the new combined treatment can reduce latent HIV reservoirs, which consist of cells infected with HIV but not actively producing HIV.

Reservoirs, which are difficult to measure, are present even in cases of treated HIV infection where there are no detectable levels of HIV in the blood.

Although not active, the reservoirs are evidence that the infection is not cured since they can be re-activated by any of a number of reasons.

IL-2 is approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for treating certain cancers.

It activates killer cells and also activates HIV from latency (a positive developmen­t since the activated cells die when expressing virus).

Monoclonal antibodies that neutralise HIV are cloned protein antibodies that bind to the surface of HIV and keep it from infecting the body’s immune cells.

They also can help killer cells attack HIV infected cells that have been activated from latency to express virus.

In the 64-week study, patients in one treatment group will receive IL-2 and those in a second treatment group will receive IL-2 plus a monoclonal antibody that neutralise­s HIV.

The hope is that the size of the HIV reservoir will decrease in both groups and that the antibody will make the IL-2 treatment more potent. The study is set to include 16 patients and begin in the second half of 2017.

A previous retrospect­ive study suggested that IL-2 treatment could decrease the size of latent HIV reservoirs.

“We think it’s important to try to confirm those findings in a prospectiv­e trial and just as important, see if the addition of a monoclonal antibody enhances the activity of IL-2,” said Dr. Lederman.

He and his study colleagues are in discussion­s with the National Institutes of Health’s Vaccine Research Centre to determine which monoclonal antibody to use among several the centre has developed to prevent or treat HIV infection.

Other CWRU School of Medicine researcher­s involved in the study are Jonathan Karn, PhD, Reinberger Professor of Molecular Biology; Benigno Rodriguez, MD, associate professor of medicine; and Rafick-Pierre Sekaly, PhD, professor of pathology. —

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