Aging, Polypharmacy and Neurotoxicity in Adults Living with HIV

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $822,303 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Central nervous system (CNS) complications continue to occur among adults aging with HIV. For example, neurocognitive impairment occurs in 30-50% of persons with HIV (PWH). With advancing age, cognitive and mood disorders such as depression increase in frequency and in severity. While research to date has focused on the biological mechanisms associated with the aging of the CNS (e.g., amyloid-related pathology), few studies have focused on aging and prescribed, potentially neurotoxic drugs influence the effects of HIV and antiretroviral therapy (ART) on cognition and depression. Studies of neurotoxicity of ART drugs and prescribed drugs in older PWH have largely been limited by small sample sizes, suboptimal neurocognitive characterization, and relatively short follow-up. This proposal will address these limitations by using data and specimens from nearly 20,000 comprehensive medical and neurobehavioral assessments collected over more than 20 years. CNS complications, such as neurocognitive impairment and major depression disorder, are a key area for multidisciplinary studies of HIV and aging in order to characterize the interactions between HIV, comorbid diseases, and their treatment and to gain insights into the pathogenesis of these complications that may inform therapeutics. The overarching hypothesis is that prescribed drug-related neurotoxicity increasingly contributes to the incidence and persistence of CNS complications in PWH as they age. To address this, the proposed project is organized into three aims: 1) Determine how age and concomitantly prescribed drugs modify the relationships between ART drugs and neurocognitive performance or depression using a longitudinal database of more than 20,000 comprehensive assessments and advanced analytical methods; 2) Determine how age and concomitantly prescribed drugs modify the dose-effect relationships between ART drugs and NC performance and depression using physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling; and 3) Explore the mechanisms by which concomitant drugs modify ART neurotoxicity using a novel high-throughput, inducible human pluripotent stem cell culture method and extracellular vesicle characterization. The completion of this proposal will provide valuable data on how aging interacts with prescribed drugs to increase the risk of ART neurotoxicity and CNS complications. The results may also inform future interventions to prevent and treat CNS complications in older PWH.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10013739
Project number
1R01AG063659-01A1
Recipient
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO
Principal Investigator
Scott L Letendre
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$822,303
Award type
1
Project period
2020-05-01 → 2025-02-28