Early CD4+ T cell recovery in human immunodeficiency virus - Infected patients receiving effective therapy is related to a down-regulation of apoptosis and not to proliferation

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Abstract

This prospective study investigated the contributions of apoptosis and proliferation of CD4+ T cells obtained by the introduction of a new antiretroviral treatment for human immunodeficiency virus infection. Virus load; T cell counts; apoptosis of T cell subsets, including naive cells; and proliferation were determined from treatment initiation to the third month in a cohort of patients. An increase in CD4+ T cell count ≥100 cells/mL over baseline was considered to be a satisfactory immune reconstitution. Sixty-nine patients completed the protocol, 22 of whom met our definition of a satisfactory immune reconstitution, showing a significantly more pronounced reduction in spontaneous CD4+ T cell apoptosis at month 1 as well as month 3, compared with the other patients. In contrast, neither Fas-induced apoptosis down-regulation nor Fas-induced increased proliferation capacity was associated with a satisfactory immune reconstitution. Down-regulation of CD4+ T cell apoptosis by antiretroviral treatment is the main mechanism associated with early CD4+ T cell increase. © 2002 Infectious Diseases Society of America.

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Roger, P. M., Breittmayer, J. P., Durant, J., Sanderson, F., Ceppi, C., Brignone, C., … Dellamonica, P. (2002). Early CD4+ T cell recovery in human immunodeficiency virus - Infected patients receiving effective therapy is related to a down-regulation of apoptosis and not to proliferation. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 185(4), 463–470. https://doi.org/10.1086/338573

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