Young woman stays undetectable for twelve years off treatment after early HIV therapy

Dr Asier Saez-Cirion speaking at the Towards an HIV Cure symposium. Photo ©Steve Forrest/Workers' Photos/IAS.
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The 8th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2015) heard today of a case where a young woman, who was infected with HIV at birth and received very early antiretroviral therapy as a child, has stayed off therapy since the age of six with a viral load well below the detectability limit of standard tests. Such 'post-treatment controllers' are models for the 'functional cure' which is one of the goals of treatment research.

Dr Asier Sáez-Cirión of the Institut Pasteur in Paris, who also presented the results to the HIV Cure Symposium the previous day, said that this was the first case of really prolonged remission seen in a person infected around the time of birth and who remains undetectable off therapy. (One previous case, the so-called “Mississippi Baby”, developed a detectable viral load again after a period of two years and three months off therapy) .

In 2014 the VISCONTI study found 14 adults who had taken early treatment and had then maintained undetectable viral loads (eight of them without a single ‘blip’) when they subsequently came off therapy. At that point the maximum length of time seen of prolonged virological remission was 9.5 years, so the current patient has been off therapy and undetectable at least as long as any of the VISCONTI patients.

Glossary

cure

To eliminate a disease or a condition in an individual, or to fully restore health. A cure for HIV infection is one of the ultimate long-term goals of research today. It refers to a strategy or strategies that would eliminate HIV from a person’s body, or permanently control the virus and render it unable to cause disease. A ‘sterilising’ cure would completely eliminate the virus. A ‘functional’ cure would suppress HIV viral load, keeping it below the level of detection without the use of ART. The virus would not be eliminated from the body but would be effectively controlled and prevented from causing any illness. 

detectable viral load

When viral load is detectable, this indicates that HIV is replicating in the body. If the person is taking HIV treatment but their viral load is detectable, the treatment is not working properly. There may still be a risk of HIV transmission to sexual partners.

CD8

A molecule on the surface of some white blood cells. Some of these cells can kill other cells that are infected with foreign organisms.

elite controllers

A small subset of people living with HIV who are able to control HIV replication in the absence of antiretroviral treatment for an unusually long period of time. Definitions vary, but an elite controller is usually defined as a person whose viral load has remained below 50 copies. However, because HIV continues to replicate even in elite controllers, ART is recommended for elite controllers who have declining CD4 counts or who develop HIV-related complications. Elite controllers and viraemic controllers are members of a larger group known as HIV controllers. Around half of HIV controllers can also be described as long-term non-progressors.

blip

A temporary, detectable increase in the amount of HIV in the blood (viral load) that occurs after antiretroviral therapy (ART) has effectively suppressed the virus to an undetectable level. Isolated blips are not considered a sign of virologic failure.

Dr Sáez-Cirión said the current case added to the evidence that in certain cases very early treatment of HIV infection could lead to the person developing a kind of immune response that was able to control HIV in the absence of treatment.

The French ANRS (Agence Nationale de Recherche sur le SIDA), the national HIV research organisation, has a database of over 10,000 mothers with HIV and from 1989 onwards has seen the birth of 579 children who acquired HIV from their mothers. Of these, 200 started treatment early, when less than six months of age, and of these, just 15 have stopped antiretroviral therapy while their viral load was below 500 copies/ml, with an average length of time on therapy before interruption of just under three years.

In all but 2 of these 15 cases, the viral load ‘rebounded’ within a year of treatment interruption. In one case, the child maintained an undetectable viral load for over three years. In the other case, the child, who is now a young woman aged 18.5 years, remains virally undetectable to this day.

As was remarked in the original Visconti study, the fact that two post-treatment controllers were found in only 15 children born with HIV may imply that post-treatment control is not uncommon – or would not be if more of them stopped antiretroviral therapy.

The young woman was born in 1996 to a mother whose only treatment was monotherapy with the now-unused HIV drug zalcitabine (ddC) since 13 weeks of gestation. At the time of delivery the mother had a very high viral load of 4.63 million copies/ml and was severely immune-compromised with a CD4 count of only 81 cells/mm3 and a CD4/CD8 ratio of only 0.16.

Because of the mother’s high viral load, the baby was given prophylactic zidovudine (AZT) and there were no signs of infection two weeks after birth, but four weeks after birth she tested positive for HIV RNA. The AZT was stopped six weeks after birth and the baby also developed a high viral load of 2.17 million copies/ml. Because of this she started antiretroviral therapy when aged three months with a therapy regimen that would now be unconventional but which was indicated for children at the time – zidovudine, didanosine, lamivudine (AZT, ddI, 3TC) and full-dose ritonavir.

At the age of five years and eight months, the child went abroad with her mother and they were lost to follow-up. When they returned a year later the girl had an undetectable viral load despite having her treatment stopped a few months earlier. They had at least one more short-term treatment interruption during this time too.

Since that time she has had two detectable viral load measurements. One, at the age of twelve, was to 510 copies/ml and was probably a real ‘blip’ or transient burst of viral production. The other at the age of 14 was only to 48 copies/ml (the detectability limit of the standard viral load test used with her was 20 copies/ml) and was probably a laboratory false-positive. Her actual viral load as determined by ultrasensitive assays was below four copies/ml in 2014 and below seven copies/ml in 2015.

Her integrated viral load – the amount of HIV DNA she has integrated into the genome of her immune system cells, is 2.1 to 2.5 copies per million T-cells, which is quite low but not exceptionally so. The HIV, in short, has not disappeared from her system: instead, her immune system must be controlling it in some way. This is the situation cure researchers term a ‘functional cure’.

In children CD4 percentage is used as a more reliable guide to immune function than CD4 count. This went down to below 20%, indicative of immune deficiency, between the ages of two and four but has since then risen and now stands at about 40%, which is within the normal range for an HIV-negative person.

Her immune responses are still being investigated but so far two things stand out. Firstly, her so-called haplotype – the genetic variation that predicts how susceptible one’s immune cells are to HIV infection – is a normal one and not one of the types that is linked to lower viral loads and slower progression.

The other is that her CD8 cells are particularly unresponsive to HIV, generating much lower levels of immune-messenger chemicals like interferon-gamma and IL-2 when stimulated by HIV antigens. Similarly, when her CD4 cells were stimulated with immune activators, although some are infected with HIV, very little was actually produced.

This lack of reaction to HIV antigens and gene activators is a characteristic seen in other post-treatment controllers and is the opposite reaction to that seen in so-called elite controllers, who maintain an undetectable viral load post-infection without ever having had treatment.

Elite controllers tend to have haplotypes associated with low viral loads and slow progression, but combine them with CD8 cells that are particularly alert to HIV and efficient at destroying HIV-infected cells. Their HIV, when it is produced, is therefore wiped out by efficient immune surveillance. This has its drawbacks: over time, elite controllers have high rates of cardiovascular disease and other conditions characteristic of inflammatory states.

Post-treatment controllers, on the other hand, tend to have haplotypes that are associated with high viral loads and fast disease progression, and tend to have had primary HIV infection characterised by high viral loads. Post-treatment, however, their immune response is characterised by a lack of CD8+ cell responses to HIV. This implies a lack of activated T-cells – which means a lack of cells producing HIV.

This challenges standard models of how to control HIV but does provide possible insights into approaches to a cure that aims to dampen down anti-HIV activity and therefore stop re-activation of the ‘reservoir’ of HIV-infected cells. But exactly what combination of events prompts people into becoming post-treatment controllers remains a mystery.

References

Sáez-Cirión A et al. HIV-1 virological remission for more than 11 years after interruption of early initiated antiretroviral therapy in a perinatally-infected child. 8th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, Vancouver. Abstract MOAA0105LB. 2015.

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