Targeting the Cholinergic Pathway in HIV-associated Inflammation and Cognitive Dysfunction

Targeting the Cholinergic Pathway in HIV-associated Inflammation and Cognitive Dysfunction
Recruiting
40 years - 100 years
All
Phase N/A
120 participants needed
1 Location

Brief description of study

Although anti-retroviral therapy (ART) enhances life expectancy and overall quality of life (QoL), HIV-infected individuals are increasingly vulnerable to non-AIDS-related diseases including HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). Inflammation is a primary mechanism in the pathogenesis of HAND and tobacco use may further exacerbate inflammation. Conversely, nicotine alone has anti-inflammatory effects suggesting that stimulating the cholinergic pathway via pharmacological treatment [e.g., galantamine (GAL)] may suppress inflammation and reverse or prevent neurocognitive deficits in HIV-1 infection. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study, HIV-infected individuals (N=120; 60 smokers, 60 nonsmokers) will be randomized to 12 weeks of GAL or placebo, followed by a 4-week washout, then 12 weeks of GAL or placebo (arms switched). All subjects will be stable on ART and the GAL dose will follow FDA guidelines. At the beginning and end of each treatment phase, inflammatory biomarkers and viral load will be assessed. Monocyte transcriptomics will also be assessed on a subset of the sample (n=60; 30/group). Neurocognition and clinical outcomes (e.g., QoL) will be measured at baseline and at 4-week intervals during each treatment phase. The primary outcomes are monocyte/macrophage and T-cell activation (CD16, CD163, and CCR2 expression; plasma CCL2 [MCP-1], sCD14; CD38/HLA-DR on CD8 cells) and neurocognitive performance (processing speed, verbal learning/memory, executive function). Exploratory outcomes include monocyte gene expression patterns and broad plasma cytokine analysis. This study will provide insight into the interactions among nAChR activation, HIV immune activation and pathogenesis, and tobacco use and has translational and therapeutic implications that could improve health outcomes among HIV-infected individuals.

Eligibility of study

You may be eligible for this study if you meet the following criteria:

  • Conditions: Tobacco Use Disorder, tobacco use disorder
  • Age: 40 years - 100 years
  • Gender: All
Updated on 19 Feb 2024. Study ID: 828125

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