Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2019

Effects of Immunonutrition in Advanced Human Immunodeficiency Virus Disease: A Randomized Placebo-controlled Clinical Trial (Promaltia Study)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background\nWhile nutritional interventions with prebiotics and probiotics seem to exert immunological effects, their clinical implications in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected subjects initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) at advanced HIV disease remain unclear.\n\n\nMethods\nThis was a pilot multicenter randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study in which 78 HIV-infected, ART-naive subjects with <350 CD4 T cells/μL or AIDS were randomized to either daily PMT25341 (a mixture of synbiotics, omega-3/6 fatty acids and amino acids) or placebo for 48 weeks, each in combination with first-line ART. Primary endpoints were changes in CD4 T-cell counts and CD4/CD8 ratio from baseline to week 48 and safety. Secondary endpoints were changes in markers of T-cell activation, bacterial translocation, inflammation, and α and β microbiota diversity.\n\n\nResults\nFifty-nine participants completed the follow-up with a mean CD4+ T-cell count of 221 ± 108 cells/μL and mean CD4/CD8 ratio of 0.26 ± 0.19. PMT25341 was well tolerated, without grade 3-4 adverse effects attributable to the intervention. While most of the assessed biomarkers improved during the follow-up in both arms, PMT25341-treated subjects did not experience any significant change, compared to placebo-treated subjects, in mean CD4+ T-cell count change (278 vs 250 cells/μL, P = .474) or CD4/CD8 ratio change (0.30 vs 0.32, P = .854). Similarly, we did not detect differences between treatment arms in secondary endpoints.\n\n\nConclusions\nIn HIV-infected patients initiating ART at advanced disease, the clear immunological benefits of ART were not enhanced by this nutritional intervention targeting the gut-associated lymphoid tissue and microbiota.\n\n\nClinical Trials Registration\nNCT00870363.

Volume 68
Pages 120–130
DOI 10.1093/cid/ciy414
Language English
Journal Clinical Infectious Diseases

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