Signatures of Cannabis Abuse in NeuroHIV (SCAN): An Integrated Molecular and Imaging Approach

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $345,092 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract HIV-infected adults in the western world have a life expectancy near that of the general population, but are at a significantly elevated risk of developing cognitive deficits. Such impairments are the most common neurological complication of HIV disease, with prevalence estimates ranging from 35-70% of all HIV-infected individuals, and research targeting such comorbidities has been identified as a top priority by the Office of AIDS Research (NOT-OD-15-137). Substance use disorders (SUD) are also more prevalent in the HIV-infected population, yet their relative contribution to the increased rate of cognitive impairment in this group remains poorly understood. A key barrier to progress in this area has been the historic lack of diagnostic tests and biomarkers that can precisely assess the neurological complications of HIV-infection, which has all but precluded quantification of the additive impact of SUD comorbidity. This barrier is central to RFA-DA-18-023, which requests applications that “foster biomarker and signature identification that could advance the clinical assessment of the degree of deterioration or damage, of functional reserve, and of resilience of host defense mechanisms, towards HIV- infection and comorbidity of HIV with SUDs.” Specifically, the RFA requests proposals that identify biomarkers derived from blood, plasma, noninvasive neuroimaging modalities, and/or other sources, with an emphasis on biomarkers that can be quantitated, with levels assessed for their ability to predict disease progression. The current project directly targets the scientific gaps identified in this RFA, Identification of Biomarkers of HIV Pathogenesis and Substance Abuse Comorbidity, using a multipronged approach that includes state-of-the-art neurophysiological, structural, and spectroscopic noninvasive imaging, cognitive assessment, and cellular and molecular analyses of blood/plasma in the context of cannabis use disorder (CUD). Specifically, the Signatures of Cannabis Abuse in NeuroHIV (SCAN) Consortium will utilize advanced magnetoencephalographic (MEG) imaging to quantify the neural dynamics serving cognitive processing, 3-Tesla MRI and multimodal parcellation methods to map brain architecture, functional MRI (fMRI) for hemodynamics and intrinsic networks, and 7-Tesla spectroscopic imaging to quantify local GABA levels across the brain. These data will be integrated with a comprehensive molecular screen that includes 35 plasma biomarkers covering the immune, inflammatory, coagulation, endothelial, and neurological systems, a 10-color flow cytometry panel delineating CD4 and CD8 T cells, B cells, NK cells, monocyte subsets, and activation markers, known clinical markers, and mitochondrial function in immune cells using the Seahorse Analyzer method. To enhance rigor, demographically-matched groups of uninfected controls with and without CUD will be enrolled, which will enable the interaction of HIV and CUD to be quantified. ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9939497
Project number
5R01DA047828-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
JAMES T. BECKER
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$345,092
Award type
5
Project period
2018-09-15 → 2021-01-14