Impact of antiretroviral therapy duration and intensification on isolated shedding of HIV-1 RNA in semen.

2013 
BACKGROUND: Effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) dramatically reduces human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission. However, isolated shedding of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) in semen (IHS) can occur in the absence of detectable viremia or genital infections. We hypothesized that ART intensification with medications active in semen might prevent IHS. METHODS: Paired blood and semen samples were collected monthly for 6 months from HIV-infected men starting ART that was intensified (iART) with maraviroc and raltegravir in an open-label fashion. Semen parameters were compared to those of historical controls starting standard ART (sART). RESULTS: Compared with 25 controls who started sART, the semen HIV-1 load in 13 subjects who started iART was more rapidly suppressed (P = .043). IHS was detected at >1 visit in 2 participants (15%) receiving iART and in 12 controls (48%) receiving sART (P = .040). Among iART recipients, IHS was associated with lower raltegravir concentrations in blood and semen, compared with complete HIV-1 suppression (P = .03). Prolonged, high-level IHS (ie, shedding of >5000 RNA copies/mL) was observed in 1 iART recipient (8%), despite rapid viremia suppression and therapeutic drug levels; for 10 months, this virus remained R5 tropic, drug susceptible, and similar in sequence to virus recovered from blood. IHS was not seen after >3 years of effective ART in a parallel, prospective cohort study. CONCLUSIONS: iART transiently reduced the occurrence of IHS early after ART initiation but did not prevent high-level IHS. IHS was not seen after more prolonged sART.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    35
    References
    21
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []