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MIV-150-Containing Intravaginal Rings Protect Macaque Vaginal Explants against SHIV-RT Infection
Author(s) -
Louise A. Ouattara,
Patrick Barnable,
Paul Mawson,
Samantha Seidor,
Thomas M. Zydowsky,
Larisa Kizima,
Aixa Rodríguez,
José A. Fernández-Romero,
Michael L. Cooney,
Kevin Roberts,
Agegnehu Gettie,
James Blanchard,
Melissa Robbiani,
Natalia Teleshova
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.01529-13
Subject(s) - ex vivo , in vivo , microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases , vaginal microbicide , microbicide , rhesus macaque , medicine , pharmacokinetics , pharmacodynamics , macaque , placebo , pharmacology , andrology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , virology , biology , population , pathology , paleontology , alternative medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , environmental health , health services
Recent studies demonstrated that intravaginal rings (IVRs) containing 100 mg of the nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) MIV-150 significantly protect macaques against a chimeric simian-human immunodeficiency virus that expresses the HIV-1 HxB2 reverse transcriptase (SHIV-RT) when present before and after vaginal challenge. The objectives of this study were to (i) evaluate the pharmacodynamics (PD) of MIV-150 in vaginal fluids (VF) and in ectocervical and vaginal tissues following 100-mg MIV-150 IVR exposure and to (ii) gain more insight whether pharmacokinetics (PK) of MIV-150 can predict PD. MIV-150 in VF collected at 1 day and 14 days post-MIV-150 IVR insertion inhibitedex vivo SHIV-RT infection in vaginal biopsy specimens from untreated animals (not carrying IVRs) in a dose-dependent manner. Previous PK studies demonstrated a significant increase of ectocervical and vaginal tissue MIV-150 concentrations 14 days versus 1 day post-IVR insertion, with the highest increase in vaginal tissue. Therefore, we tested PD of MIV-150 in tissues 14 days post-MIV-150 IVR insertion.Ex vivo SHIV-RT infection of vaginal, but not ectocervical, tissues collected 14 days post-MIV-150 IVR insertion was significantly inhibited compared to infection at the baseline (prior to MIV-150 IVR exposure). No changes in vaginal and ectocervical tissue infection were observed after placebo IVR exposure. Overall, these data underscore the use of theex vivo macaque explant challenge models to evaluate tissue and VF PK/PD of candidate microbicides beforein vivo animal efficacy studies. The data support further development of MIV-150-containing IVRs.

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