Subscribe to Pittwire Today
Get the most interesting and important stories from the 麻豆传媒.In 1984, Charles Rinaldo launched a study to learn more about a mysterious illness befalling gay men across the U.S. He was 37 years old, only 6 years into his appointment as an assistant professor in the Pitt 麻豆传媒 of Medicine and 麻豆传媒 of Public Health, when he put the University on the map for groundbreaking AIDS research.
With the backing of a $4.2 million, four-year National Institutes of Health (NIH) contract, set out to recruit several thousands of gay men in the Pittsburgh tristate area to donate blood and other clinical specimens. It was the beginning of the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study, which aimed to uncover the process by which a virus leads to AIDS and the development of the disease post-diagnosis.
The Pitt Men鈥檚 Study recently commemorated 40 years of trailblazing research, including contributions to more than 1,700 scientific articles. The study is behind breakthroughs in understanding the transmission and treatment of HIV and AIDS and continues to impact the lives and careers of study participants and scientists alike.
Bringing the NIH study to Pittsburgh
When he started at Pitt, Rinaldo鈥檚 primary research focused on cytomegalovirus, a herpesvirus that can cause serious illness in people with weakened immune systems, but he soon changed course.
鈥淥nce the first CDC report on AIDS was published in 1981, I immediately realized how important and potentially central this could be to my virus immunology research,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 chose that path and never looked back.鈥
He pitched Pittsburgh as one of five sites for establishing the because the area was considered low-incidence for the disease. The federal agency also chose several high-incidence locations: Los Angeles, Chicago, Baltimore and San Francisco, which exited the cohort after a year. Because the study welcomed both HIV-negative and HIV-positive gay male participants, the cryopreserved specimens have been able to provide valuable insight into how the body changes post-infection.
Participation wanted
Initially, getting the word out about the study was a full-court press.
鈥淚 learned in establishing the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study that you cannot do it alone. I had to engage and trust in the LGBTQ community that I was not previously a part of,鈥 said Rinaldo.
He formed a dedicated research team that included gay men and lesbians who acted as a bridge to their communities, providing credibility and accessibility in a time of crisis. Study researchers allied themselves with gay bar owners to gain access to patrons, placed ads in local LGBTQ publications and networked with gay churches and sports leagues. The message: We can鈥檛 fight AIDS without your help.
Marc Wagner, then 22 years old, answered the call, becoming one of the original study participants.
He was an out gay man who was seeing beloved members of his community fall ill. The decision to volunteer was easy, he said.
When he joined the study, an HIV-positive diagnosis was considered a death sentence; there was no treatment, and stigma in the form of housing, jobs and medical discrimination ran rampant against people who contracted HIV and AIDS.
The study鈥檚 requirements for volunteers have changed since its inception. Generally, participants are asked to come in every six months to have copious amounts of blood drawn and to answer questionnaires about their health and habits. At times, study participants also submitted urine, fecal and semen samples, provided throat washings with a salt solution, and had their limbs and torso measured to track sub-dermal fat deposits.
After his second visit to the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study, Wagner learned he was HIV-positive. While the news was devastating, it set him on a path of advocacy and a career in research.
鈥淏eing a part of the study has been a way of giving back to humanity, giving something to the world,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to me to not just live with the condition but do what I can to help.鈥
To say Wagner is helping is an understatement 鈥 along with his volunteer work, he is employed at Pitt as a lab manager for Velpandi Ayyavoo, an expert in HIV-1 virology and faculty member in the 麻豆传媒 of Public Health who often performs research on samples from the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study.
Along with publishing multiple on HIV, Wagner is a longtime active member of the International AIDS Society and former chair and co-chair for the National Community Advisory Board for the NIH Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study, which was combined with the agency鈥檚 Women鈥檚 Interagency HIV Study Combined Cohort Study in 2019. He continues as an active member of the National Community Advisory Board.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know if I was going to live after receiving my diagnosis, so I decided to do as much as I could do towards a cure,鈥 Wagner said
Pitt Men鈥檚 Study participant testimonials
鈥淚 have been part of this study since the mid 鈥80s, and I feel as though [attending appointments] is like coming home to visit my family.鈥 鈥 Nick
鈥淢y theme song is 鈥業 Will Survive.鈥 Thank you to the staff and doctors of the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study, my friends, for encouraging me to fight, and to not miss a dose of my medicine no matter how bad the side effects. Thank you for all the hugs, smiles and encouraging words. You all made a difference and are the reason that I am a person 鈥楲IVING with HIV鈥 today.鈥 鈥 Richard
鈥淚 feel privileged to live in a city that has been continually funded to do AIDS research. I have received wonderful patient care and thousands of dollars鈥 worth of blood work for donating my time [to the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study].鈥 鈥 Doug
听
The commitment of a lifetime
Forty years later, Wagner and Rinaldo continue to contribute 鈥 stalwarts of what is now one of the longest-running studies of HIV and AIDS.
It鈥檚 unusual for scientific cohort studies to last 40 years or more, said Rinaldo, who remains the principal investigator of the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study. To have made it so far, he credits learning from his personal and professional successes with his mistakes. The way forward, he said, is to 鈥渒eep on truckin鈥.鈥
The Pitt Men鈥檚 Study is funded by the NIH through 2026. Currently, Rinaldo, in partnership with Yue Chen, a research associate professor of medicine in the 麻豆传媒 of Medicine, is analyzing oral and fecal microbiome profiles and blood plasma samples the study collected during early years of the study 40 years ago to examine the influence of climate change and antibiotic drug resistance in HIV infection.
A few factors have contributed to the study鈥檚 endurance, said Rinaldo: the timeliness of the research, the team鈥檚 focused dedication, continuous financial support and the value of the scientific findings.
鈥淏ut most of all, it鈥檚 the dedication of the cohort participants,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ithout them, there is no Pitt Men鈥檚 Study.鈥
Though he set out to include up to 10,000 gay men in the Pitt Men鈥檚 Study, so far about 2,000 have participated, with 443 currently enrolled.
The University recently recognized Wagner鈥檚 contributions with a Pitt Public Health Practice Established Partner Award.
Said Wagner, 鈥淚n the early days of the AIDS pandemic, we had leadership that wouldn鈥檛 even speak the name of this dreadful disease,鈥 he recalled at the award ceremony. 鈥淲hat they failed to understand is that our lived experiences give people a unique perspective 鈥 a perspective that fuels commitment to research, advocacy and education.鈥
听
Top photo by Tom Altany