PD-1 Inhibition to Determine CNS Reservoir of HIV-Infection
NCT ID: NCT03239899
Last Updated: 2025-10-02
Study Results
Outcome measurements, participant flow, baseline characteristics, and adverse events have been published for this study.
View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE1
13 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-04-09
2023-02-13
Brief Summary
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HIV affects millions of people. The disease may "hide" in the brain, even in people with well-controlled HIV without cancer. Then it may "wake up" and continue. The drug pembrolizumab uses the body's immune system to fight cells like cancer cells. It is approved to treat some cancers but not HIV. Researchers want to see if it is safe for HIV-positive people without cancer. This study is not for HIV treatment; only one dose of the drug will be used.
Objective:
To learn if the drug pembrolizumab, used to treat certain cancers, is safe for HIV-positive people.
Eligibility:
Adults ages 18 and older with HIV who are in another NIH protocol
Design:
Participants will be screened with:
* Medical history
* Physical and neurological exams
* Blood tests
* Lumbar puncture. The lower back will be numbed. A needle will remove fluid from between back bones.
* FDG-PET/CT. A radioactive sugar will be injected in a thin plastic tube (catheter) inserted in an arm vein. Participants will rest for an hour, urinate, then lie in the scanner. A mask will hold the head still.
* Leukapheresis. An optional procedure at baseline. White blood cells are removed from you using a serum cell separator machine
Women who can become pregnant cannot take pembrolizumab. Men who take it must use 2 kinds of contraception.
Participants will have up to 7 more visits, which repeat some screening tests.
At 1 visit, participants will get one dose of pembrolizumab by catheter for 30 minutes. They will get allergy and pain medicines.
At 2 visits, participants will have a brain MRI. They will get a contrast agent by catheter. They will lie in a metal cylinder that takes pictures for 1-2 hours. They will get earplugs for loud sounds.
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Detailed Description
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In this Phase I, proof-of-concept study, we aim to determine the safety and tolerability of pembrolizumab, an FDA-approved monoclonal antibody against programmed cell death protein (PD)-1, in viremically suppressed human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV) positive patients. We are examining the correlation of immune activation and suppression markers in viremically suppressed HIV positive patients with the effects of pembrolizumab on immune restoration function (e.g. CD4 count, HIV viral load) and immune activation (e.g. HIV-specific T-cell responses).
Study Population
HIV is estimated to infect 37.6 million people globally, with 690,000 deaths and 1.5 million new infections occurring yearly. There is no cure. Opportunistic infections and neoplasms contribute to a large portion of mortality and morbidity within the HIV-positive population. Even in well- controlled, viremically suppressed patients, neurologic complications including HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder, continue to contribute to disease morbidity and mortality.
There is evidence that HIV reservoirs contribute to the inability to cure HIV infection. In the brain, macrophages and astrocytes harbor HIV. It is theorized that the brain is a potential reservoir for replication competent HIV. PD-1 expression is elevated in patients with HIV compared to uninfected controls. Upregulated PD-1 expression is associated with higher viral load and increased mortality in infections.1 PD-1 co-expression on regulatory T-cells has been shown to correlate with disease progression in perinatally-infected HIV-positive children. Drugs targeting the PD-1 pathway in HIV infection have shown upregulation of T-cell responses that are potentially critical to eradication of infection. Pembrolizumab is an attractive option due to its mechanism of action, although it has been rarely used in the HIV population.
Design
In this single-center, single-arm, open label, baseline-versus-treatment phase I clinical trial, twelve patients with HIV-1 infection receive a one-time dose of 200mg pembrolizumab with a baseline study period of 3 weeks, a one-day treatment phase, and a 6-month post treatment phase. Outcome measures are collected every 3 to 6 weeks for the duration of the study.
Outcome Measures
The primary outcome is the safety and tolerability of pembrolizumab, which is measured by clinical exam, laboratory studies and adverse event tabulations using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) v5.0.
In addition, viral and immunologic outcome measures investigating the impact of pembrolizumab on HIV-1 biology and its effects on immune function is measured in the CSF and periphery, including single copy HIV analysis, CD4+ T-cell count, PD-1 lymphocyte expression and T-cell phenotype analysis, T-cell proliferation against HIV-proteins, CSF cytokine analysis and/or CSF antibody profiling (LIPS). These additional studies offer indirect proof of a HIV viral reservoir in the CNS as well as potential efficacy of pembrolizumab in reversing immune exhaustion against latent HIV
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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HIV Participants
Participants who received 200 mg of Pembrolizumab administered as a one-time intravenous infusion over 30 minutes during the treatment phase of the study.
Pembrolizumab
Participants will receive one dose of 2mg/kg of pembrolizumab IV at Week 0.
Interventions
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Pembrolizumab
Participants will receive one dose of 2mg/kg of pembrolizumab IV at Week 0.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Diagnosis of HIV-1 infection, with positive HIV 1 antibody testing
* HIV RNA less than or equal to 40 copies/mL in plasma in the last 12 or greater months
* CD4 count above 350 cells/uL
* Antiretroviral therapy for 12 months prior to trial
* Fully vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2. Fully vaccinated is defined as:
* Two weeks out from the second dose of a two-dose vaccine series (Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech); or
* Two weeks out from a single-dose vaccine (Johnson \& Johnson/Janssen)
* Patient must be willing and able to comply with all the aspects of trial design and follow-up.
* Patients must be able to provide informed consent
* Women of childbearing potential must agree to use contraception (defined as two forms of effective birth control), from the time of enrollment until 4 months after the last exposure to pembrolizumab
* Participants who are physically able to father a child must agree to use 2 effective methods of contraception (birth control) from the time you enroll in the study until 4 months after your last exposure to pembrolizumab
* Effective methods of contraception for this study include:
* hormonal contraception (birth control pills, birth control patches, injected hormones, hormonal implants or vaginal ring),
* Intrauterine device,
* Barrier methods (condom or diaphragm) combined with spermicide, and
* Surgical sterilization (hysterectomy, tubal ligation, or vasectomy).
* If you have had a hysterectomy, tubal ligation, or vasectomy (or have a partner with a hysterectomy, tubal ligation or vasectomy), you do not have to use 2 methods of birth control.
Exclusion Criteria
* Patient has received immunomodulatory/immunosuppressive therapy (including IV steroids but excluding local injections) in the preceding 6 months.
* Patient with known autoimmunity that would include but is not limited to disorders such as hypo/hyperthyroidism, myasthenia gravis, diabetes mellitus type 1, hemolytic anemia, and immune mediated hepatitis (but excluding patients with hypothyroidism already on thyroid replacement therapy).
* Prior history of cancer (excluding non-invasive squamous and basal cell carcinoma)
* Any opportunistic infection in the prior 2 years (excluding thrush) including latent TB (or a positive TB Quantiferon Gold test)
* Patient has received other investigational drugs within 3 months before enrollment
* Positive serological or PCR evidence of active or prior infection with HTLV-1/II, Hepatitis B or C. Patients with hepatitis B core (+), surface antibody (+), surface antigen ( ) and hepatitis B DNA (-) eligible to participate in the study (provided they are on tenofovir, lamivudine or TAF). Participants with prior hepatitis C who are hepatitis C antibody (+) but hepatitis C RNA (-) with normal liver enzymes and no evidence of cirrhosis on clinical liver ultrasound are eligible to participate in the study.
* Metal in the body which would make having an MRI scan unsafe, such as pacemakers, stimulators, pumps, aneurysm clips, metallic prostheses, artificial heart valves, cochlear implants or shrapnel fragments, or history of welding or metal worker
* Claustrophobia
* Inability to lie comfortably on the back for up to two hours.
* Abnormal anti-thyroid panel (anti-TPO and anti-TG) test at screening visit.
* Abnormal screening/baseline blood tests exceeding any of the limits defined below or as deemed exclusionary by the investigators on review:
* AST and ALT values \>1.1 times ULN
* Fasting triglyceride \> 300 mg/dL
* Total bilirubin \>1.1 times ULN (unless participant is taking atazanavir or has Gilbert syndrome)
* Creatinine Clearance or eGFR \<60 ml/minute (adjusted for race)
* Hemoglobin \< 10 g/dL
* Absolute neutrophil count \< 1000/microliter
* Platelet count \<130,000/mm(3) (if platelet clumping is present on hematology slide review, platelet count \<100,000/mm3 is considered exclusionary to study)
* Hemoglobin A1c greater than or equal to 6%
* Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) within normal limits. If TSH is not within normal limits then the participant may be eligible if thyroxine (T4) is within normal limits. Participants are not excluded if they are on a stable dose of replacement thyroid medication; dose may be adjusted as needed.
* An employee or staff of the NIH
18 Years
120 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
NIH
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Avindra Nath, M.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Locations
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National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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Henderson LJ, Reoma LB, Kovacs JA, Nath A. Advances toward Curing HIV-1 Infection in Tissue Reservoirs. J Virol. 2020 Jan 17;94(3):e00375-19. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00375-19. Print 2020 Jan 17.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Related Links
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NIH Clinical Center Detailed Web Page
Other Identifiers
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17-N-0145
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
170145
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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