Effect of HIV Infection and Highly Active Antiretroviral Treatment (HAART) on Bone Homeostasis

Advances in HAART have been a huge success story in the management of HIV infection. However, serious metabolic complications including osteoporosis and bone fractures are increasingly been seen with HAART, and the responsible mechanisms remain poorly elucidated. The skeleton continually regenerates through homeostatic bone remodeling. Osteoclasts the cells responsible for bone resorption form...

Date First Received: November 24, 2009

Last Updated: November 24, 2009

Verified by: Emory University, November 2009

Clinical Trial Phase: N/A | Start Date: January 2010

Overall Status: Not yet recruiting

Estimated Enrollment: 120

Brief Summary

Official Title: “Effect of HIV Infection and HAART on Bone Homeostasis”

Condition Keyword(s):

Advances in HAART have been a huge success story in the management of HIV infection.

However, serious metabolic complications including osteoporosis and bone fractures are increasingly been seen with HAART, and the responsible mechanisms remain poorly elucidated.

The skeleton continually regenerates through homeostatic bone remodeling. Osteoclasts the cells responsible for bone resorption form under the influence of the key osteoclastogenic cytokine Receptor- Activator of NF-KB (RANKL). The osteoclastogenic and pro-resorptive activities of RANKL are moderated by its physiological decoy receptor osteoprotegerin (OPG).

Increase in the ratio of RANKL to OPG accelerates the rate of osteoclastic bone resorption leading to osteoporosis.

The investigators' preliminary studies have now demonstrated that in an animal model of HIV/AIDS, the HIV-1 Transgenic rat, the development of osteoporosis is recapitulated as observed in human patients. Furthermore, the investigators found that B cell expression of OPG is significantly downregulated, concurrent with a significant upregulation in production of RANKL.

The investigators hypothesize that "immunological disruption of B cell number and/or function, may play a key causal role in the bone loss associated with HIV/AIDS, by driving a "switch" from OPG production to overproduction of RANKL". The investigators propose to determine the role of perturbations in B and T cells on OPG and RANKL production and on bone turnover.

This is a cross-sectional analysis of changes in BMD (DXA), and B cell and T cell function in HIV seronegative/seropositive subjects matched by known risk factors for osteoporosis.

Serum will be collected for quantitation of total OPG and RANKL, and for biochemical markers of bone turnover (CTx, and TRAP5b), specific and sensitive markers of osteoclast activity, and for osteocalcin and P1NP, specific and sensitive markers of bone formation by commercial ELISAs. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) will be isolated and total and percentage frequency and absolute number (/mL) of B cells (CD19+) and T cells (CD3) and their subsets (CD4 and CD8). B cells (CD19) and T cells (CD3 and CD4 and CD8) will be immunomagnetically purified and OPG and RANKL mRNA and protein production quantitated by RT-PCR and ELISA respectively. As a secondary endpoint, B cells will be fractionated into subsets based on differential expression of the markers CD10, CD21 and CD27 and OPG and RANKL production quantitated by in each subset by intracellular staining and FACS analysis.

Study Type: Observational

Study Design: Cohort, Cross-Sectional

Study Primary Completion Date: January 2014

Arms, Groups and Cohorts in this Clinical Trial

  • : HIV-seropositive, HIV seronegative
  • : Treatment naive subjects
    • HIV-seropositive subjects naive to antiretroviral therapy. HIV-seronegative subjects otherwise healthy.

Outcome Measures for this Clinical Trial

Primary Measures

  • To correlate serum and B cell and T cell OPG and/or RANKL production in treatment-naïve HIV-infected patients, with indices of bone turnover and structure and with viral load.
    • Time Frame: During entry visit
      Safety Issue?: No

Criteria for Participation in this Clinical Trial

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 1. Healthy (sero-negative) volunteers and otherwise healthy treatment naïve HIV-1 sero-positive patient.
  • 2. Age >30<50 years and segregated into age and gender ranges as described above in section 3.2 (15 subjects per stratification based on Power Test).
  • 3. Ability and willingness of subject or legal guardian/representative to give written informed consent.
  • 4. Antiretroviral naivety.
  • 5. No CD4 T-cell counts requirement.
  • 6. Absence of non-HIV related active immunological or bone disorders such as;
  • Bone marrow or organ transplantation
  • Inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis, crohn's disease)
  • Multiple Myeloma
  • Osteogenesis imperfect
  • Osteomalacia
  • Osteosarcoma
  • Paget's disease
  • Postmenopausal osteoporosis
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus
  • 7. Laboratory values obtained within 30 days prior to study entry:
  • Hemoglobin >9.4 g/dl
  • Creatinine < 2 mg/dl
  • AST (SGOT) < 2 x ULN
  • ALT (SGPT) < 2 x ULN

Exclusion Criteria:

  • 1. Physical or biochemical evidence or a medical history of malignancy.
  • 2. Currently (within the past 8 weeks) taking any medication with known influence on the immune or skeletal system (e.g. immune modulation therapy, glucocorticoids, steroid hormones, bisphosphonates).
  • 3. Vaccination (e.g. flu vaccination) within 8 weeks of screening.
  • 4. The patient is not fully ambulatory.
  • 5. Pregnancy or breast feeding.
  • Exclusion criteria are primarily centered on immunological aspects with bone related aspects secondary. This is because in our model immunological function is proximal to bone function. Consequently, use of vitamin D or calcium supplementation will not be exclusion criteria, but will be added as covariates in our analysis.

Gender Eligibility for this Clinical Trial: Both

Minimum Age for this Clinical Trial: 18 Years

Maximum Age for this Clinical Trial: 50 Years

Are Healthy Volunteers Accepted for this Clinical Trial?: Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Clinical Trial Sponsor Information

Lead Sponsor: Emory University

Overall Clinical Trial Officials and Contacts

Ighovwerha Ofotokun, MD, MSc Principal Investigator Emory University  

Overall Contact: Ighovwerha Ofotokun, MD, MSc 404-616-0659 iofotok@emory.edu

Additional Information

Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on February 04, 2010

Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record. http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01020045

Study ID Number: OPG-2

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01020045

Health Authority: United States: Institutional Review Board

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