Patients with hemophilia A without human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection have lower CD4+ counts and CD4+/CD8+ ratios than controls. This is usually interpreted as a therapy-induced immunodeficiency. Our data re-examine the effect of therapy on peripheral blood mononuclear cell immunophenotypic subpopulations in all congenital clotting disorders. Since late 1985 we have prospectively observed HIV-1 uninfected persons with all types and severity of disorder. Controls were household members without clotting disorders or HIV-1 infection. Analyses of immunophenotype and treatment included a longitudinal random effects model. Compared with controls, age-adjusted CD4+ counts were significantly lower in treated patients (P < .0001) and in patients with all types of clotting disorders who were seldom or never treated (P = .0005). Significantly lower values among both treated and untreated clotting disorder subjects (P
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Hassett, J., Gjerset, G. F., Mosley, J. W., Fletcher, M. A., Donegan, E., Parker, J. W., … Pike, M. C. (1993). Effect on lymphocyte subsets of clotting factor therapy in human immunodeficiency virus-1-negative congenital clotting disorders. Blood, 82(4), 1351–1357.
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