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Featured researches published by Alessandra Ruggiero.


EBioMedicine | 2015

During Stably Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy Integrated HIV-1 DNA Load in Peripheral Blood is Associated with the Frequency of CD8 Cells Expressing HLA-DR/DP/DQ

Alessandra Ruggiero; Ward De Spiegelaere; Alessandro Cozzi-Lepri; Maja Kiselinova; Georgios Pollakis; Apostolos Beloukas; Linos Vandekerckhove; Matthew C. Strain; Douglas D. Richman; Andrew N. Phillips; Anna Maria Geretti; Paola Vitiello; Nicola Mackie; Jonathan Ainsworth; Anele Waters; Frank Post; Simon Edwards; Julie M. Fox

Background Characterising the correlates of HIV persistence improves understanding of disease pathogenesis and guides the design of curative strategies. This study investigated factors associated with integrated HIV-1 DNA load during consistently suppressive first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART). Method Total, integrated, and 2-long terminal repeats (LTR) circular HIV-1 DNA, residual plasma HIV-1 RNA, T-cell activation markers, and soluble CD14 (sCD14) were measured in peripheral blood of 50 patients that had received 1–14 years of efavirenz-based or nevirapine-based therapy. Results Integrated HIV-1 DNA load (per 106 peripheral blood mononuclear cells) was median 1.9 log10 copies (interquartile range 1.7–2.2) and showed a mean difference of 0.2 log10 copies per 10 years of suppressive ART (95% confidence interval − 0.2, 0.6; p = 0.28). It was positively correlated with total HIV-1 DNA load and frequency of CD8+HLA-DR/DP/DQ+ cells, and was also higher in subjects with higher sCD14 levels, but showed no correlation with levels of 2-LTR circular HIV-1 DNA and residual plasma HIV-1 RNA, or the frequency of CD4+CD38+ and CD8+CD38+ cells. Adjusting for pre-ART viral load, duration of suppressive ART, CD4 cell counts, residual plasma HIV-1 RNA levels, and sCD14 levels, integrated HIV-1 DNA load was mean 0.5 log10 copies higher for each 50% higher frequency of CD8+HLA-DR/DP/DQ+ cells (95% confidence interval 0.2, 0.9; p = 0.01). Conclusions The observed positive association between integrated HIV-1 DNA load and frequency of CD8+DR/DP/DQ+ cells indicates that a close correlation between HIV persistence and immune activation continues during consistently suppressive therapy. The inducers of the distinct activation profile warrant further investigation.


Open Forum Infectious Diseases | 2018

Factors Associated With Persistence of Plasma HIV-1 RNA During Long-term Continuously Suppressive Firstline Antiretroviral Therapy

Alessandra Ruggiero; Alessandro Cozzi-Lepri; Apostolos Beloukas; Douglas D. Richman; Saye Khoo; Andrew N. Phillips; Anna Maria Geretti; Eras Study Grp

Abstract Background Persistence of plasma HIV-1 RNA during seemingly effective antiretroviral thereapy (ART) is incompletely understood. Using an ultrasensitive assay, this cross-sectional study investigated residual plasma HIV-1 RNA in subjects maintained on firstline ART with continuous viral load suppression <50 copies/mL for ≤15 years without recognized viral load blips or treatment interruptions and explored its relationship with the duration of suppressive ART, efavirenz concentrations in plasma, 2-LTR circular HIV-1 DNA (2-LTRc DNA) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and cellular (CD4 plus CD26/CD38/CD69; CD8 plus CD38/HLA-DR/DP/DQ) and soluble (sCD14, sCD27, sCD30, IL-6) markers of immune activation in peripheral blood. Methods Residual plasma HIV-1 RNA, total HIV-1 DNA and 2-LTRc DNA were quantified by real-time and digital droplet PCR. Cellular (CD4 plus CD26/CD38/CD69; CD8 plus CD38/HLA-DR/DP/DQ) and soluble (sCD14, sCD27, sCD30, IL-6) markers of immune activation were measured by flow cytometry and ELISA. Results Residual plasma HIV-1 RNA and 2-LTRc DNA were detected in 52/104 (50%) and 24/104 (23%) subjects, respectively. Among subjects with detectable HIV-1 RNA, 50/52 showed levels ≤11 copies/mL. In adjusted analyses, HIV-1 RNA levels were 0.37 log10 copies/mL higher with each log10 U/mL increase in sCD27 (95% confidence interval, 0.01–0.73; P = .02). No significant association was found between residual plasma HIV-1 RNA and other explored parameters. Conclusions These findings point to an ongoing relationship between plasma HIV-1 RNA and selected markers of immune activation during continuously suppressive ART. The novel direct association with levels of sCD27 warrants further investigation.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2018

Drug resistance outcomes of long-term ART with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate in the absence of virological monitoring

Giovanni Villa; Richard Phillips; Colette Smith; Alexander J Stockdale; Alessandra Ruggiero; Apostolos Beloukas; Lambert Tetteh Appiah; David Chadwick; Fred Stephen Sarfo; Anna Maria Geretti

Abstract Objectives The resistance profiles of patients receiving long-term ART in sub-Saharan Africa have been poorly described. This study obtained a sensitive assessment of the resistance patterns associated with long-term tenofovir-based ART in a programmatic setting where virological monitoring is yet to become part of routine care. Methods We studied subjects who, after a median of 4.2 years of ART, replaced zidovudine or stavudine with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate while continuing lamivudine and an NNRTI. Using deep sequencing, resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) were detected in stored samples collected at tenofovir introduction (T0) and after a median of 4.0 years (T1). Results At T0, 19/87 (21.8%) subjects showed a detectable viral load and 8/87 (9.2%) had one or more major NNRTI RAMs, whereas 82/87 (94.3%) retained full tenofovir susceptibility. At T1, 79/87 (90.8%) subjects remained on NNRTI-based ART, 5/87 (5.7%) had introduced lopinavir/ritonavir due to immunological failure, and 3/87 (3.4%) had interrupted ART. Whilst 68/87 (78.2%) subjects maintained or achieved virological suppression between T0 and T1, a detectable viral load with NNRTI RAMs at T0 predicted lack of virological suppression at T1. Each treatment interruption, usually reflecting unavailability of the dispensary, doubled the risk of T1 viraemia. Tenofovir, lamivudine and efavirenz selected for K65R, K70E/T, L74I/V and Y115F, alongside M184V and multiple NNRTI RAMs; this resistance profile was accompanied by high viral loads and low CD4 cell counts. Conclusions Viraemia on tenofovir, lamivudine and efavirenz led to complex resistance patterns with implications for continued drug activity and risk of onward transmission.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2018

Blood CXCR3(+) CD4 T Cells Are Enriched in Inducible Replication Competent HIV in Aviremic Antiretroviral Therapy-Treated Individuals

Riddhima Banga; Francesco A. Procopio; Alessandra Ruggiero; Alessandra Noto; Khalid Ohmiti; Matthias Cavassini; Jean-Marc Corpataux; William A. Paxton; Georgios Pollakis; Matthieu Perreau

We recently demonstrated that lymph nodes (LNs) PD-1+/T follicular helper (Tfh) cells from antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated HIV-infected individuals were enriched in cells containing replication competent virus. However, the distribution of cells containing inducible replication competent virus has been only partially elucidated in blood memory CD4 T-cell populations including the Tfh cell counterpart circulating in blood (cTfh). In this context, we have investigated the distribution of (1) total HIV-infected cells and (2) cells containing replication competent and infectious virus within various blood and LN memory CD4 T-cell populations of conventional antiretroviral therapy (cART)-treated HIV-infected individuals. In the present study, we show that blood CXCR3-expressing memory CD4 T cells are enriched in cells containing inducible replication competent virus and contributed the most to the total pool of cells containing replication competent and infectious virus in blood. Interestingly, subsequent proviral sequence analysis did not indicate virus compartmentalization between blood and LN CD4 T-cell populations, suggesting dynamic interchanges between the two compartments. We then investigated whether the composition of blood HIV reservoir may reflect the polarization of LN CD4 T cells at the time of reservoir seeding and showed that LN PD-1+ CD4 T cells of viremic untreated HIV-infected individuals expressed significantly higher levels of CXCR3 as compared to CCR4 and/or CCR6, suggesting that blood CXCR3-expressing CD4 T cells may originate from LN PD-1+ CD4 T cells. Taken together, these results indicate that blood CXCR3-expressing CD4 T cells represent the major blood compartment containing inducible replication competent virus in treated aviremic HIV-infected individuals.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2018

Comparative analysis and generation of a robust HIV-1 DNA quantification assay

Jordan Thomas; Alessandra Ruggiero; Francesco A. Procopio; Giuseppe Pantaleo; William A. Paxton; Georgios Pollakis


Journal of Infection | 2018

Renal health after long-term exposure to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in HIV/HBV positive adults in Ghana

Giovanni Villa; Rachel Phillips; Cj Smith; Alexander J Stockdale; Apostolos Beloukas; Lambert Tetteh Appiah; David Chadwick; Alessandra Ruggiero; Fred Stephen Sarfo; Frank Post; Anna Maria Geretti


Future Virology | 2017

Utility of integrated HIV-1 DNA quantification in cure studies

Alessandra Ruggiero; Eva Malatinkova; Sofie Rutsaert; William A. Paxton; Linos Vandekerckhove; Ward De Spiegelaere


Presented at: UNSPECIFIED. (2016) | 2016

Renal health after long-term exposure to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) in HIV/HBV co-infected individuals in Sub-Saharan Africa: results from the HEPIK cohort

Giovanni Villa; Richard Phillips; Colette Smith; Alexander J Stockdale; Apostolos Beloukas; Lambert Tetteh Appiah; David Chadwick; Alessandra Ruggiero; Fred Stephen Sarfo; Frank Post; Anna Maria Geretti


Archive | 2016

HIV-1 persistence during ART

Alessandra Ruggiero


In: INT AIDS SOCIETY (2016) | 2016

Long- term virological outcomes of replacing zidovudine or stavudine with tenofovir in the absence of routine virological monitoring in Kumasi, Ghana

Giovanni Villa; Richard Phillips; Colette Smith; Alexander J Stockdale; Apostolos Beloukas; Lambert Tetteh Appiah; David Chadwick; Alessandra Ruggiero; Fred Stephen Sarfo; Anna Maria Geretti

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David Chadwick

James Cook University Hospital

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Fred Stephen Sarfo

Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital

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Lambert Tetteh Appiah

Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital

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Colette Smith

University College London

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