Cells (Mar 2022)

Impact of Anti PD-1 Immunotherapy on HIV Reservoir and Anti-Viral Immune Responses in People Living with HIV and Cancer

  • Marine Baron,
  • Cathia Soulié,
  • Armelle Lavolé,
  • Lambert Assoumou,
  • Baptiste Abbar,
  • Baptiste Fouquet,
  • Alice Rousseau,
  • Marianne Veyri,
  • Assia Samri,
  • Alain Makinson,
  • Sylvain Choquet,
  • Julien Mazières,
  • Solenn Brosseau,
  • Brigitte Autran,
  • Dominique Costagliola,
  • Christine Katlama,
  • Jacques Cadranel,
  • Anne-Geneviève Marcelin,
  • Olivier Lambotte,
  • Jean-Philippe Spano,
  • Amélie Guihot,
  • The French Cooperative Thoracic Intergroup (IFCT) CHIVA-2 Investigators,
  • The ANRS Co 24 OncoVIHAC Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11061015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
p. 1015

Abstract

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The role of immune checkpoints (ICPs) in both anti-HIV T cell exhaustion and HIV reservoir persistence, has suggested that an HIV cure therapeutic strategy could involve ICP blockade. We studied the impact of anti-PD-1 therapy on HIV reservoirs and anti-viral immune responses in people living with HIV and treated for cancer. At several timepoints, we monitored CD4 cell counts, plasma HIV-RNA, cell associated (CA) HIV-DNA, EBV, CMV, HBV, HCV, and HHV-8 viral loads, activation markers, ICP expression and virus-specific T cells. Thirty-two patients were included, with median follow-up of 5 months. The CA HIV-DNA tended to decrease before cycle 2 (p = 0.049). Six patients exhibited a ≥0.5 log10 HIV-DNA decrease at least once. Among those, HIV-DNA became undetectable for 10 months in one patient. Overall, no significant increase in HIV-specific immunity was observed. In contrast, we detected an early increase in CTLA-4 + CD4+ T cells in all patients (p = 0.004) and a greater increase in CTLA-4+ and TIM-3 + CD8+ T cells in patients without HIV-DNA reduction compared to the others (p ≤ 0.03). Our results suggest that ICP replacement compensatory mechanisms might limit the impact of anti-PD-1 monotherapy on HIV reservoirs, and pave the way for combination ICP blockade in HIV cure strategies.

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