Systemic cytokine levels do not predict CD4+ T-cell recovery after suppressive combination antiretroviral therapy in chronic human immunodeficiency virus Infection

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Abstract

Background. Subjects on suppressive combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) who do not achieve robust reconstitution of CD4+ T cells face higher risk of complications and death. We studied participants in theWomen's Interagency HIV Study with good (immunological responder [IR]) or poor (immunological nonresponder [INR]) CD4+ T-cell recovery after suppressive cART (n = 50 per group) to determine whether cytokine levels or low-level viral load correlated with INR status. Methods. A baseline sample prior to viral control and 2 subsequent samples 1 and 2 years after viral control were tested. Serum levels of 30 cytokines were measured at each time point, and low-level human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) viral load and anti-HIV antibody levels were measured 2 years after viral suppression. Results. There were minimal differences in cytokine levels between IR and INR subjects. At baseline, macrophage inflammatory protein-3ß levels were higher in IR subjects; after 1 year of suppressive cART, soluble vascular endothelial growth factor-R3 levels were higher in IR subjects; and after 2 years of suppressive cART, interferon gamma-induced protein 10 levels were higher in INR subjects. Very low-level HIV viral load and anti-HIV antibody levels did not differ between IR and INR subjects. Conclusion. These results imply that targeting residual viral replication might not be the optimum therapeutic approach for INR subjects.

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Norris, P. J., Zhang, J., Worlock, A., Nair, S. V., Anastos, K., Minkoff, H. L., … Keating, S. M. (2016). Systemic cytokine levels do not predict CD4+ T-cell recovery after suppressive combination antiretroviral therapy in chronic human immunodeficiency virus Infection. Open Forum Infectious Diseases, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofw025

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