Short-term Disulfiram Administration to Reverse Latent HIV Infection: a Dose Escalation Study
- Registration Number
- NCT01944371
- Lead Sponsor
- University of California, San Francisco
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine the safety, pharmacology and bioactivity of disulfiram in antiretroviral treated HIV-infected adults. The investigators primary hypothesis is that 3 days of disulfiram will result in an increase in HIV transcription in CD4+ T-cells in patients on suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART).
- Detailed Description
Combination antiretroviral therapy for HIV-1 infection can suppress viremia to below the detection limit in the vast majority of motivated individuals with access to these drugs. However, HIV-1 persists in a small pool of latently infected resting memory CD4+ T cells carrying integrated viral genomes. Although other reservoirs for HIV-1 exist, the general consensus among experts is that latent virus (HIV DNA in resting memory CD4+ T cells) is the primary barrier to HIV-1 eradication. A widely discussed approach for eliminating this viral reservoir requires reactivation of latent HIV-1. Disulfiram, an FDA-approved drug used to treat alcoholism was shown to activate HIV-1 gene expression in vitro, suggesting that activation of latently infected cells in vivo may occur. Our primary hypothesis is that the addition of disulfiram to a stable effective antiretroviral drug regimen will result in a dose dependent increase in HIV transcription in CD4+ T-cells in HIV-1 in patients on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 30
- HIV-1 infection
- Age 18 or older
- HIV plasma viral load <50 copies/ml for at least 3 years with at least one measurement per year and most recent viral load within 3 months of screening.
- Receiving combination antiretroviral therapy (at least 3 agents); subjects must be on a efavirenz-based or a ritonavir-based regimen
- Two CD4+ T cell counts greater than 350 cell/µl in the six months prior to screening
- Willing to abstain from any alcohol one day before, during the three day period in which disulfiram will be administered and the two week period immediately after disulfiram administration
- Current alcohol use disorder or hazardous alcohol use
- Current use of any drug formulation that contains alcohol or that might contain alcohol, including the gelatin capsule and liquid formulations of ritonavir, ritonavir/lopinavir, amprenavir and fosamprenavir.
- Current use of tipranavir or maraviroc.
- Current use of zidovudine, stavudine or didanosine (as disulfiram potentially has potent irreversible inhibitory effects on mitochondrial metabolism and hence could exacerbate the toxicity of these drugs).
- Concurrent use of rivaroxaban ( a CYP3A metabolized medication) as the cytochrome P450 inhibitory effects of disulfiram on rivaroxaban are unknown.
- Current use of warfarin
- Patients who are intending to modify antiretroviral therapy in the next 2 weeks for any reason.
- Serious illness requiring hospitalization or parental antibiotics within preceding 3 months
- A screening hemoglobin below 12.5 g/dL
- A screening TSH consistent with Hypothyroidism
- Significant renal disease or acute nephritis
- Significant myocardial disease or diagnosed coronary artery disease
- Significant respiratory disease
- History of psychosis, seizure disorder, abnormal electroencephalogram or brain damage with significant persisting neurological deficit.
- Clinically active hepatitis as evidenced by clinical jaundice or Grade 2 or higher liver function test abnormalities.
- Hepatic cirrhosis or decompensated chronic liver disease.
- Diabetes or current hypothyroidism.
- Concurrent treatment with immunomodulatory drugs, or exposure to any immunomodulatory drug in past 16 weeks.
- Recent exposure (within the preceding 8 weeks) to any vaccine.
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women. Women of childbearing potential must have a negative serum pregnancy test at screening and agree to use a double-barrier method of contraception throughout the study period.
- Significant substance use, which in the opinion of the investigator, is likely to interfere with the conduct of the study.
- Prior or current use of disulfiram, vorinostat or other experimental agent used with the intent to perturb the HIV-1 viral reservoir
- Current use of an antiretroviral regimen which does not include either efavirenz or a protease inhibitor
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description disulfiram 500mg Disulfiram 500mg disulfiram by mouth per day for 3 days disulfiram 1000mg Disulfiram 1000mg disulfiram by mouth per day for 3 days disulfiram 2000mg Disulfiram 2000mg disulfiram per mouth per day for 3 days
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Cell-associated HIV RNA Baseline and 3 days Fold change cell-associated HIV RNA in Total CD4 T-Cells.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Proviral HIV DNA Baseline and 30 days Fold change in HIV DNA levels between Baseline and Day 30
Plasma HIV RNA Baseline and 3 days Fold change in plasma HIV RNA levels from baseline through day 3
Trial Locations
- Locations (2)
Alfred Hospital
🇦🇺Melbourne, Australia
San Francisco General Hospital
🇺🇸San Francisco, California, United States