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Levels of HIV-1 persistence on antiretroviral therapy are not associated with markers of inflammation or activation

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2017

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Public Library of Science
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Gandhi, R. T., D. K. McMahon, R. J. Bosch, C. M. Lalama, J. C. Cyktor, B. J. Macatangay, C. R. Rinaldo, et al. 2017. “Levels of HIV-1 persistence on antiretroviral therapy are not associated with markers of inflammation or activation.” PLoS Pathogens 13 (4): e1006285. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1006285. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006285.

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Abstract

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces levels of HIV-1 and immune activation but both can persist despite clinically effective ART. The relationships among pre-ART and on-ART levels of HIV-1 and activation are incompletely understood, in part because prior studies have been small or cross-sectional. To address these limitations, we evaluated measures of HIV-1 persistence, inflammation, T cell activation and T cell cycling in a longitudinal cohort of 101 participants who initiated ART and had well-documented sustained suppression of plasma viremia for a median of 7 years. During the first 4 years following ART initiation, HIV-1 DNA declined by 15-fold (93%) whereas cell-associated HIV-1 RNA (CA-RNA) fell 525-fold (>99%). Thereafter, HIV-1 DNA levels continued to decline slowly (5% per year) with a half-life of 13 years. Participants who had higher HIV-1 DNA and CA-RNA before starting treatment had higher levels while on ART, despite suppression of plasma viremia for many years. Markers of inflammation and T cell activation were associated with plasma HIV-1 RNA levels before ART was initiated but there were no consistent associations between these markers and HIV-1 DNA or CA-RNA during long-term ART, suggesting that HIV-1 persistence is not driving or driven by inflammation or activation. Higher levels of inflammation, T cell activation and cycling before ART were associated with higher levels during ART, indicating that immunologic events that occurred well before ART initiation had long-lasting effects despite sustained virologic suppression. These findings should stimulate studies of viral and host factors that affect virologic, inflammatory and immunologic set points prior to ART initiation and should inform the design of strategies to reduce HIV-1 reservoirs and dampen immune activation that persists despite ART.

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Biology and Life Sciences, Microbiology, Medical Microbiology, Microbial Pathogens, Viral Pathogens, Immunodeficiency Viruses, HIV, HIV-1, Medicine and Health Sciences, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Pathogens, Organisms, Viruses, Biology and life sciences, RNA viruses, Retroviruses, Lentivirus, Cell Biology, Cellular Types, Animal Cells, Blood Cells, White Blood Cells, T Cells, Immune Cells, Immunology, Vaccination and Immunization, Antiviral Therapy, Antiretroviral Therapy, Public and Occupational Health, Preventive Medicine, Immune Response, Inflammation, Diagnostic Medicine, Signs and Symptoms, Cell biology, Cellular types, Animal cells, Blood cells, White blood cells, T cells, Cytotoxic T cells, Immune cells, Medicine and health sciences, Immunity, Immune Activation, Virology, Viral Persistence and Latency, Biochemistry, Biomarkers

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