iconstar paper   HIV Articles  
Back grey arrow rt.gif
 
 
Effect of ipilimumab on the HIV reservoir in an
HIV-infected individual with metastatic melanoma
 
 
  Download the PDF here
 
"Blockade of CTLA-4 with ipilimumab in an HIV-infected patient on ART had significant effects on the total number and phenotype of CD4+ T cells and induced a profound increase in cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA with onset after the first dose and was associated with subsequent decline in plasma HIV RNA. Further studies are warranted to determine if ipilimumab could play a role in eliminating latently infected cells in HIV-infected patients on ART."
 
Wightman, Fionaa,b,c; Solomon, Ajanthaa,b,c; Kumar, Sanjeev S.d; Urriola, Nicolase; Gallagher, Kerrie; Hiener, Bonnief; Palmer, Sarahf; Mcneil, Catrionad; Garsia, Rogere; Lewin, Sharon R.a,b,c aDoherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, University of Melbourne bDepartment of Infectious Diseases, Alfred Hospital and Monash University cCentre for Biomedical Research, Burnet Institute, Melbourne, Victoria dDepartment of Medical Oncology eDepartment of Clinical Immunology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney fWestmead Millenium Institute, University of Sydney, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia.
 
Long-lived latently infected resting CD4+ T cells are the main reason why current antiretroviral therapy (ART) is unable to cure HIV infection [1]. Recent work has suggested that the expression of immune checkpoint markers, such as programmed death-1 (PD1), may play a role in viral persistence on ART via either suppression of virus transcription and/or reduced HIV-specific T cell activity [2,3], but the role of cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4 or CD152) in HIV persistence on ART is not clear.
 
Ipilimumab (Yervoy, Bristol-Myers Squibb, New York, New York) is a human immunoglobulin G1 antibody to CTLA-4 that inhibits binding of CTLA-4, expressed on activated T cells and regulatory T cells (Tregs), to its ligands CD80 and CD86. The drug is used to treat metastatic melanoma and has been associated with multiple changes in immune function thought to enhance antitumor T cell function [4].
 
In HIV-infected individuals, CTLA-4 expression on CD4+ T cells correlates with HIV disease progression [5], and loss of HIV-specific CD4+ T cell function can be reversed in vitro by CTLA-4 blockade [5-7]. In a simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) macaque model, CTLA-4 blockade led to an increase in T-cell activation and viral replication [8]. Here, we describe changes in the HIV reservoir in an HIV-infected patient on ART who received ipilimumab for the treatment of metastatic melanoma.
 
At initiation of ipilimumab treatment in October 2013 for disseminated melanoma, the patient was a 51-year-old man diagnosed with HIV in 1986 and with a CD4+ nadir of 159 cells/μl in 1995. He was on ART since 1996 and plasma HIV RNA was less than 400 copies/ml from 2004 and less than 20 copies/ml from July 2012 (Fig. 1a). He received four doses of ipilimumab 3 mg/kg given at three-weekly intervals.
 
Whilst receiving ipilimumab, there was no overall change in plasma HIV RNA as measured by the Roche viral load assay [lower limit of detection (LLOD) = 20 copies/ml; Fig. 1c]. Using a sensitive single-copy HIV RNA assay (SCA) (LLOD = 0.3 copies/ml) [9], there was a cyclical decrease in plasma HIV RNA following each infusion and an overall decline from 60 to 5 copies/ml (Fig. 1c). Given more frequent sampling was performed with the SCA, we believe that longitudinal changes over time were best assessed with this assay.
 
There was an increase in CD4+ T cells after each infusion (overall change from 610 to 900 cells/μl) (Fig. 1b). This increase was predominantly in total memory (Fig. 1d) and effector memory CD4+ T cells (Fig. 1e). Postinfusion increases in CD4+ T-cell activation were seen as measured by human leukocyte antigen-DR and CD38 and CCR5 expression (Fig. 1f). There were transient increases in CD8+ T cells following the second and third infusions, but no overall change in CD8+ T cell activation (Fig. 1g).
 
Cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA in sorted CD4+ T cells was quantified with increases observed following the first and second infusions, with a maximum change from baseline of 19.6-fold (Fig. 1h). The changes in cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA was greater than those recently reported, following the administration of the histone deacetylase inhibitors vorinostat [10,11] or panobinostat [12], or following disulfiram [13].
 
There was no change in cell-associated HIV DNA (Fig. 1i), but any change in the small proportion of cells with HIV DNA containing inducible proviruses [14] may not have been detectable with the assays used here.
 
Acknowledging the limitations deriving from this being a single case, we speculate the increase in cell-associated unspliced RNA could have been due to mechanisms, including an increase in HIV RNA transcription secondary to blocking the inhibitory effects of CTLA-4 on T cell transcription, similar to that described following ex-vivo anti-PD1 treatment of CD4+ T cells from HIV-infected patients on ART [15]; redistribution or expansion of effector memory CD4+ T cells that may have a higher ratio of cell-associated HIV RNA to HIV DNA [16] (Satish Pillai, San Francisco, UCSF, San Francisco, California, personal communication); or redistribution or expansion of activated T cells including Tregs. The increase in cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA and decline in SCA was intriguing, perhaps mediated by elimination of latently infected CD4+ T cells that were induced to express viral antigens. But the rapidity of the decline in SCA makes this somewhat unlikely.
 
Blockade of CTLA-4 with ipilimumab in an HIV-infected patient on ART had significant effects on the total number and phenotype of CD4+ T cells and induced a profound increase in cell-associated unspliced HIV RNA with onset after the first dose and was associated with subsequent decline in plasma HIV RNA. Further studies are warranted to determine if ipilimumab could play a role in eliminating latently infected cells in HIV-infected patients on ART.

 
 
 
 
  iconpaperstack View Older Articles   Back to Top   www.natap.org