Human T cell lymphotropic virus type I does not increase human immunodeficiency virus viral load in vivo

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Abstract

Human T lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) can increase human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication in vitro, and several studies suggest that HTLV-I accelerates the progression of HIV infection. To determine whether HTLV-I enhances HIV replication in vivo, a case-control study was done of serum HIV viral load, using polymerase chain reaction, in 23 subjects with HTLV-I/HIV coinfection and 92 control subjects with HIV single infection. The geometric mean serum RNA level was 11,482 copies/mL in the coinfected group and 13,804 in the single-infection group (P = .57), a result that did not change after adjustment for zidovudine use and CD4 cell count. Among subjects with advanced HIV infection, there was a trend toward higher viral load among singly infected subjects. HTLV-I did not appear to increase HIV plasma RNA levels in subjects with coinfection. These results do not provide a biologic basis for the hypothesis that HTLV-I accelerates the course of HIV infection.

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APA

Harrison, L. H., Quinn, T. C., & Schechter, M. (1997). Human T cell lymphotropic virus type I does not increase human immunodeficiency virus viral load in vivo. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 175(2), 438–440. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/175.2.438

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