Summary: Although chronic infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV) is known to drive T lymphocytes toward a senescent phenotype, it remains controversial whether and how CMV can cause coronary heart disease (CHD). To explore whether CMV seropositivity or T-cell populations associated with immunosenescence were informative for adverse cardiovascular outcome in the very old, we prospectively analyzed peripheral blood samples from 751 octogenarians (38% males) from the Newcastle 85+ study for their power to predict survival during a 65-month follow-up (47.3% survival rate). CMV-seropositive participants showed a higher prevalence of CHD (37.7% vs. 26.7%, P = 0.030) compared to CMV-seronegative participants together with lower CD4/CD8 ratio (1.7 vs. 4.1, P < 0.0001) and higher frequencies of senescence-like CD4 memory cells (41.1% vs. 4.5%, P < 0.001) and senescence-like CD8 memory cells (TEMRA, 28.1% vs. 6.7%, P < 0.001). CMV seropositivity was also associated with increased six-year cardiovascular mortality (HR 1.75 [1.09-2.82], P = 0.021) or death from myocardial infarction and stroke (HR 1.89 [107-3.36], P = 0.029). Gender-adjusted multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed that low percentages of senescence-like CD4 T cells (HR 0.48 [0.32-0.72], P < 0.001) and near-senescent (CD27 negative) CD8 T cells (HR 0.60 [0.41-0.88], P = 0.029) reduced the risk of cardiovascular death. For senescence-like CD4, but not near-senescent CD8 T cells, these associations remained robust after additional adjustment for CMV status, comorbidities, and inflammation markers. We conclude that CMV seropositivity is linked to a higher incidence of CHD in octogenarians and that senescence in both the CD4 and CD8 T-cell compartments is a predictor of overall cardiovascular mortality as well as death from myocardial infarction and stroke.
CITATION STYLE
Spyridopoulos, I., Martin-Ruiz, C., Hilkens, C., Yadegarfar, M. E., Isaacs, J., Jagger, C., … von Zglinicki, T. (2016). CMV seropositivity and T-cell senescence predict increased cardiovascular mortality in octogenarians: Results from the Newcastle 85+ study. Aging Cell, 15(2), 389–392. https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.12430
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