HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD...

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HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine

Transcript of HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD...

Page 1: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples:

Priority for Public Health and

Pathogenesis

Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhDDepartments of Global Health and Medicine

Page 2: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Key messages• Infectious diseases are transmitted in an

environmental context• The study of host HIV-1 susceptibility factors

should capture that context• Discordant couples are an important model for

public health and pathogenesis • Ongoing studies of HIV-1 discordant couples in

Africa will evaluate factors in heterosexual transmission

Page 3: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Caveats

• Focus on sexual transmission of HIV-1

• Much more data is published on risk factors for other forms of HIV-1 transmission and HIV-1 disease

Page 4: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Sexual Transmission of HIV-1

• All HIV-1 sexual transmission involves one HIV-1 infected/transmitting and one uninfected/exposed partner (discordant couple)

• This partnership is more traceable in some cases

• What are the factors that determine when transmission occurs

Page 5: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Transmission Factors

• The exposed partner ?

• The infected partner?

• Behavior ?

Page 6: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Transmission Risk: Is it the number of sex acts or number of individuals?

Model heterosexual and MSM transmission data:

- Known HIV-1 infected and uninfected partners

- Does infectivity depend on # sex acts or # partners (Peterman 1988; Grant 1987; Kaplan 1990)

• 55 heterosexual couples with 10 transmissions– Infectivity per sex act 0.0014 [0.0006-0.002] however:– 26 couples with fewest sex acts yielded 70% of transmissions– 27 couples with most sex acts accounted for 30%– 1980s data

Not consistent with model that transmission is proportional to exposure based solely on number of sex acts

Page 7: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Transmission: By individual or by sex act

• 138 MSM yielding 11 seroconversions– Infectivity per partner of 0.051 [0.022 – 0.08]

Transmission Probability Number of Partners

0.5 1

9.7 2

0.11 3-4

0.42 5

• Probability of transmission varied by number of partnerships, • Highest probability is for two partners.• Need additional biological data to characterize infectiousness and susceptibility

Page 8: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Heterosexual Couples Studies:Rakai, Uganda

• Community randomized trial of STD control for HIV prevention – 415 HIV-1 discordant couples– 174 monogamous

• Followed every 10 months for 3 visits; study conducted over 4 years– Sexual/clinical history – HIV-1 RNA, HIV-1 subtype, GUD/STD

• Compare SC to non-SC– Matched by age, gender and time of HIV RNA

Page 9: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Rakai Transmission data

Characteristic Adj RR

Age15-29 y 2.38 (1.3-4.4)

>30 y 1

Genital Ulcer Disease

Yes 2.05 (1-4.1)

No 1

HIV RNA quantile (log10)

>4.89 7.06 (2.3-21.8)

4.17-4.89 6.39 (2.1-19.4)

3.5-4.16 3.31 (1-10.8)

0-3.49 1

Stage of infectionIncident 4.98 (2-12.4)

Prevalent 1

Late stage 3.5 (1.8-6.9)

Wawer et al JID 2005

Page 10: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Rakai HIV-1 transmission per coital act

• Incident index partner in early infection:– 0.0082 (0.0039-0.0150)

• Prevalent index partner after 21-40 months of follow-up– 0.0004 (0-0.001)

• Compare to estimate from heterosexuals in US 5 years earlier (Kaplan et al 1990)

– 0.0014 [0.0006-0.002]

Page 11: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Meta-Analysis of Heterosexual Transmission Risk Probability and Co-factors

• Review of 29 observational studies with 15 heterosexual infectivity estimates

• 9/15 were discordant couples studies – 4 longitudinal– 5 cross-sectional

• Summarize infectivity estimates

• Quantify cofactor effects on infectivity

Powers et al Lancet 2008

Page 12: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Category # of estimates Rate/1000 (95% CI)

Region

USA/Europe 8 0.59 (0.44-0.75)

Africa 6 0·91 (0·59–1·22)

Asia 1 31·00 (25·00–40·00)

Sex actPenile-vaginal 5 0·84 (0·51–1·17)

Penile-anal 1 33·80 (18·51–49·09)

TransmissionMTF 10 0·66 (0·54–0·79)

FTM 6 2·76 (1·19–4·33)

GUDNo 4 3·72 (0·70–6·75)

Yes 5 30·55 (11·27–49·84)

STI (in exp)No 1 12·00 (6·00–25·00)

Yes 2 55·86 (4·43–107·29)

Male Circumcision

Circ 2 5·13 (3·37–6·89)

Not Circ 2 97·33 (0·00–295·16)

Age (exp)>30 y 6 1·06 (0·56–1·56)

<30 y 2 15·71 (0·00–45·20)

Disease Stage (inf)

Mid 4 0·71 (0·57–0·85)

Early 2 4·67 (0·00–10·46)

Late 4 3·18 (0·94–5·42)Powers et al Lancet 2008

Page 13: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Infectivity estimates and epidemiologic context

• Common estimate for HIV-1 infectivity in heterosexual contact: 0.001– Should be considered a lower bound

• Meta-analysis:– Penile-vaginal contacts – 0.1– Penile-anal contact – 0.3

Epidemiologic context can greatly impact transmission risk

Page 14: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Transmission:Exposure Factors

• The exposed partner: – GUD/STD

– Gender

– Male Circumcision

– Age

• The infected partner: – GUD/STD

– Gender

– Stage of infection

– HIV-1 plasma/genital RNA

• Behavior: - Sex practices (anal vs. vaginal)- Condom use

Page 15: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Resistance: Cellular Immune Factors

• HIV-1 specific CD8-CTL– Kenyan CSW – US/Canadian discordant couples – US MSM +/-

• HIV-specific CD4+ IL-2/proliferative response– Kenyan CSW– Italian discordant couples

• Increased Immune activation – 2 discordant couples studies– 1 contradictory MSM study

Page 16: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Resistance: Humoral Immune Factors

• HIV-1 specific mucosal IgA responses– Italian discordant couples – Thai and Kenyan CSW– Contradictory findings in US discordant couples

• Autoantibodies (-CD4, CCR5, -HLA)– Italian discordant couples contradictory

Page 17: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Resistance: Innate factors

• CCR5-32– MSM and discordant couples at low frequency– Not present in African cohorts (CCR2-64I)– CCR5D32/CCR5-2459A/G haplotype in MSM

• CCL3L1 (MIP-1 natural ligand of CCR5)– Higher copy number in cross-sectional cohorts

Page 18: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Resistance: Innate factors

• Class I HLA– A2 supertype protects Kenyan EU not Zambian– A*36 in transmission in HIV-infected partners– Lower Class I allele sharing between partners

• Class II HLA– DRB1/DQB1 associated in Zambian EU– DR5, DQ4

• Non-classical HLA– HLA-E, HLA-G with increased susceptibility in African

women (cross-sectional)

Page 19: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

HIV-1 Resistance: Innate factors

• KIR/Class I HLA– CSW in Cote d’Ivoire EU with NK-cell inhibitory

receptor (3DL1/2DL3) lacking HLA cognate (Bw4/C1)

• DC-SIGN/DC-SIGNR – DC-SIGN het repeat polymorphism in MSM– Cross-sectional cohort in North Indians (DC-SIGNR

7/7 homozygote with increased infection)– Cross-sectional MSM cohort (DC-SIGNR 7/5 het with

resistance)

• Trim5, APOBEC3G small MSM and cross-sectional heterosexual cohorts

Page 20: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Factors in HIV-1 Sexual Transmission

• How to make sense of it all:– Diversity in host factors could represent

• Many pathways to resistance• Lots of false positive associations

– Difficult to compare across many cohorts with candidate gene testing

• Given importance of characterizing exposure, use of convenience-based sampling of controls (blood donors or uncharacterized HIV-positives) may be comparing “apples” and “oranges”

Page 21: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

What is needed

• Large cohorts

• Cases and comparison groups with well characterized HIV-1 exposure

• Wide evaluation of host genotypic, immunologic and viral characteristics in the same individuals

Page 22: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

African HIV-1 Discordant Couples

• Public Health imperative: – >50% of all stable couples in which one partner is HIV-1

infected has an HIV-1 negative partner (i.e., are HIV-1 discordant)

– 50-60% of new HIV-1 infections in married couples may come from married partner (based on data from Kenya/Uganda)

– Important to develop couples counseling capacity and community awareness of HIV-1 discordance in African communities

Page 23: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

African HIV-1 Discordant Couples

• Research potential:– High rates of retention (couples counseling)– Prospective follow-up for both couples

• Sexual history, demographics, clinical data

– Specimen collection for• Host genetic• Host immunologic• Viral sequencing

• Drawbacks: Increased cost and infrastructure

Page 24: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

UW Studies of HIV-1 Discordant Couples in Africa

Study Purpose Cohort # SC Locations Follow-up Status

Partners Study

HSV-2 suppression to reduce HIV-1 transmission

3408 couples- HIV/HSV-2+CD4>250

~150 7 East Africa7 Southern Africa

12-24 mo Follow-up Complete

COS Observational 475 couples-few restrictions

~25 1 Uganda1 RSA

12 mo Sept 2009

Partners PrEP

Pre-Exposure prophylaxis in HIV-1 negative to reduce HIV-1 transmission

3900 couples ~190 4 Uganda4 Kenya

24-36 mo Enrl – 2010F/u - 2013

Total --- ~7800 couples ~365 --- 12-36 mo --

Page 25: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

UW Discordant Couples Cohorts:Specimen Collection

Specimen type FrequencyPlasma Quarterly

Serum Quarterly

Cervical swab Quarterly

Semen 1 time point

PBMC 6-monthly*

Whole blood RNA 6-monthly*

* Collected at 2 sites in Partners Study and COS

Page 26: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Partners Study:Baseline Demographic Characteristics

Characteristic

Couples w/HIV-infected Women Couples w/HIV-infected Men

HIV-infected Female (#, %)

HIV-uninfected Male (#, %)

HIV-infected Male (#, %)

HIV-infected Female (#, %)

Median age (IQR) 30 (25-35) 35 (30-42) 37 (32-45) 31 (25-38)Yrs living w/ partner (median, IQR)† 5 (2-9) -- 6 (3-13) --

Number of children (median, IQR) † 2 (1-3) -- 3 (2-5) --

Total sex acts (median, IQR) † 4 (2-8) -- 4 (2-8) --

Unprotected sex acts (median, IQR) † 0 (0-1) -- 0 (0-1) --

Couples reporting any unprotected sex acts 661 (29%) -- 311 (28%) --

Use condoms for contraception 1062 (46%) -- -- 490 (44%)

Use no contraception 727 (32%) -- -- 372 (33%)

Page 27: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Partners Study:Baseline Clinical and Lab Characteristics

Characteristic

Couples w/HIV-infected Women Couples w/HIV-infected Men

HIV-infected Female (#, %)

HIV-uninfected Male (#, %)

HIV-infected Male (#, %)

HIV-infected Female (#, %)

Symptoms of GUD (previous 3 mos)

174 (8%) 46 (2%) 63 (6%) 54 (5%)

HSV-2 seropositive 2272 (99%) 1361 (59%) 1080 (97%) 954 (85%)

N. gonorrhoeae +(TMA) 40 (2%) 13 (1%) 10 (1%) 10 (1%)

C. trachomatis + (TMA) 46 (2%) 66 (0.3%) 16 (1%) 19 (2%)

T. vaginalis + (TMA) 314 (14%) 157 (7%) 52 (5%) 102 (9%)

Positive RPR 140 (6%) 107 (5%) 61 (6%) 43 (4%)

CD4 count (cells/mcL) (median, IQR)

483 (355-665) -- 424 (334-571) --

HIV-1 plasma RNA Log10 (median,IQR) 4.0 (3.4-4.6) -- 4.4 (3.7-4.9) --

Page 28: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Pathogenesis Studies Planned

• Envelope sequencing of transmitted variants (Mullins)• Genome-Wide Association Study (CHAVI)• Candidate Gene Genotyping (D. Nickerson/M. Bamshad)• HLA typing• Pre-seroconversion Gene Expression Arrays studies• Pre-seroconversion HIV-1 specific CD4 and CD8 studies

and risk of HIV-1 acquisition (McElrath)• Immune activation studies: Risk of acquisition, effect on

set-point viral load in seroconverters (McElrath)• HIV-1 clade studies: HIV transmission risk and set point

in seroconverters• Neutralizing antibody studies

Page 29: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Acknowledgments: Clinical Trial Coordinating Center

Coordinating Center:• Principal Investigator: Connie Celum• Co-Investigators: Anna Wald, Julie McElrath, Jared Baeten, Jai Lingappa, Larry Corey • Program Management: Linda Barnes • Regional Directors: Nelly Mugo, & Andrew Mujugira, Patrick Ndase• Clinical Monitors: Marothodi Semenya, Apollo Odika, Hilda O’Hara• Coordinating Center Operations: Margaret Warner-Lubin, Dana Panteleeff, Meighan Krows,

Heena Shaw, Ellen Wilcox• Biostatisticians/Data Management: Jim Hughes, Deborah Donnell, Amalia Meier, Richard

Wang, Erin Kahle, Lara Kidoguchi, Renee Hefforn, Jennifer Broad • Fiscal/Admin: Linda Barnes, Darcie Somera, Carlos Flores, Becky Karschney, Matt Leidholm,

Toni Maddox, Alice Rose, Troy Sexton, Calvin Tran, Christy Wilson • Central Repository: Harald Haugen, Justin Brantley, Shauna Durbin, Vikram Nayani Coordinating Center Contractors:• Site Laboratory Oversight: Wendy Stevens, Clinical Lab Services, Univ of Wits• HIV-1 Retrovirology Labs: Bob Coombs, Joan Dragavon; Jane Kuypers, Reggie Sampoleo • HSV-2 Virology Lab: Rhoda Ashley, Anne Cent• HIV Virology (Endpoint Analysis) Lab: Jim Mullins, Mary Campbell• Data Management Contractor: Darryl Pahl & Lisa Ondrajeck

DSMB: Rich Whitley, ChairFunding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Page 30: HIV-1 Serodiscordant Couples: Priority for Public Health and Pathogenesis Jairam Lingappa, MD, PhD Departments of Global Health and Medicine.

Partners Study Site Investigators

– Nairobi: J Kiarie, C. Farquhar, G. John-Stewart– Kisumu: E. Bukusi, C. Cohen– Eldoret: E. Were, K. Fife– Thika: N. Mugo– Tanzania: R. Manongi, S. Kapiga– Kampala: E. Nakku-Joloba, L. Kavuma, A. Ronald, E. Katabira– Kigali: B Bekan, K. Kayatenkore, S. Allen– Soweto/PHRU: G. Gray, G. DeBryn, J. McIntyre– Orange Farm/RHRU: S. Delaney & H. Rees– Cape Town: A. DeCock, D. Coetzee– Gaborone: P. Dusara, J. Makhema , M. Essex– Lusaka, Ndola & Kitwe: M. Inambao, W. Kanweka, S. Allen

And above all: thanks to all study participants