The study team's prior research has shown that dysfunction of a specific nerve, called the vagus nerve, is associated with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), and that SIBO is associated with signs of inflammation in the blood of people living with HIV (PLWH). This research will explore pathways linking vagal dysfunction to inflammation in HIV, focusing on the gastrointestinal tract, and study whether a medication called pyridostigmine and stimulation of the vagus nerve are beneficial therapies.
Objectives Aim 1: To elucidate mechanisms linking VD, SIBO and chronic inflammation in PLWH. PLWH (N=150) will undergo autonomic function tests (AFTs) for VD, hydrogen/methane breath testing (HBT) for SIBO, Wireless Motility Capsule (WMC, SmartPill) testing for GI transit times and pH measurements, blood draw for quantification of inflammatory mediators, and collection of stool samples and oral swabs for characterization of the GI microbiome. Hypothesis 1a (primary): The relationship between VD and SIBO in HIV is mediated by prolonged small bowel transit time (SBTT) and hypochlorhydria. Hypothesis 1b (exploratory): There is an additional pathway linking VD and elevated IL-6 in PLWH which is independent of SIBO and bacterial translocation. Aim 2: To determine whether the relationship between VD and SIBO is modified by the presence of HIV-infection. HIV-infection results in disruption of the GI mucosal barrier,5 which could make PLWH more vulnerable to adverse GI effects of VD. HIV-uninfected controls (N=100), age and gender matched to the PLWH from Aim 1, will undergo the same assessment as the PLWH. The study team will test for effect modification of the VD-SIBO relationship by HIV status, using logistic regression to examine the interaction between VD and HIV. Aim 3: To establish vagal pathways as a viable treatment target for individuals with well-controlled HIV. PLWH with VD, SIBO and/or prolonged SBTT (N=96) will be identified from the Aim 1 cohort. The first 86 eligible patients will be randomized to 8 weeks of pyridostigmine versus placebo; the remaining 10 will receive 8 weeks of open-label noninvasive vagal nerve stimulation (nVNS) to assess feasibility. All patients will then be retested (AFTs, HBT, SmartPill, blood draw, stool samples and oral swabs). Hypothesis 3a (primary): Eight weeks of low-dose pyridostigmine (30mg PO TID) will reduce SIBO as compared to placebo in PLWH. Hypothesis 3b (exploratory): Non-invasive VNS is safe, well tolerated and acceptable to PLWH.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
55
Eight weeks of low-dose pyridostigmine
matching placebo x 8 weeks
stimulation of the vagus nerve
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
New York, New York, United States
Small bowel transit time (SBTT)
Small bowel transit time (SBTT) measured by wireless motility capsule (wmc, smartpill)
Time frame: 8 weeks
Gastric pH measurement
Gastric pH measurement measured by wireless motility capsule (wmc, smartpill)
Time frame: 8 weeks
Hydrogen/methane breath testing (hbt)
hydrogen/methane breath testing (hbt) to measure small intestinal bacterial overgrowth
Time frame: 8 weeks
IL6 measurement [Time Frame: 5 years]
Time frame: 8 weeks
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