T cell activation is associated with lower CD4+ T cell gains in human immunodeficiency vires-infected patients with sustained viral suppression during antiretroviral therapy

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Abstract

Although T cell activation is associated with disease progression in untreated human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection, its significance in antiretroviral-treated patients is unknown. Activated (CD38+HLA-DR+) T cell counts were measured in 99 HIV-infected adults who had maintained a plasma HIV RNA level ≤1000 copies/mL for a median of 21 months while receiving antiretroviral therapy. Patients with sustained viral suppression had lower levels of T cell activation than untreated patients but higher levels than HIV-uninfected control subjects. Persistent T cell activation was associated with decreased CD4+ T cell gains during therapy. For every 5% increase in the proportion of activated CD8+ T cells, 35 fewer CD4+ T cells/mm3 were gained. Increased T cell activation was associated with shorter duration of viral suppression, hepatitis C virus coinfection, frequent low-level viremia, and lower nadir CD4+ T cell counts. Interventions that directly target T cell activation or the determinants of activation may prove to be useful adjuvants to antiretroviral therapy.

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APA

Hunt, P. W., Martin, J. N., Sinclair, E., Bredt, B., Hagos, E., Lampiris, H., & Deeks, S. G. (2003). T cell activation is associated with lower CD4+ T cell gains in human immunodeficiency vires-infected patients with sustained viral suppression during antiretroviral therapy. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 187(10), 1534–1543. https://doi.org/10.1086/374786

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