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Restoration of CD4 T-cell responses to cytomegalovirus is short-lived in severely immunodeficient HIV-infected patients responding to highly active antiretroviral therapy
Authors:Keane N M  Price P  Lee S  Almeida C A  Stone S F  James I  French M A
Affiliation:Department of Clinical Immunology and Biochemical Genetics, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, WA, Australia.
Abstract:OBJECTIVES: To define the level of pathogen-specific immune reconstitution persisting over 3 to 5 years of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in HIV-infected patients who began therapy with CD4 T-cell counts below 50 cells/microL. METHODS: Cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific T-cell responses were analysed in adult HIV-1-infected patients with nadir CD4 T-cell counts below 50 cells/microL before HAART. CMV-specific CD4 T-cell responses were measured by interferon-gamma enzyme-linked immunospot assay (ELISpot assay), lymphoproliferation and interferon-gamma levels in cell culture supernatants. RESULTS: CD4 T-cell responses to CMV were low in untreated patients and remained low during the first year on HAART, but increased progressively to levels similar to those found in HIV-seronegative CMV-seropositive controls at 3 years. Responses then declined markedly and at 5 years were lower than controls. This could not be explained by changes in CD4 or CD8 T-cell counts or plasma HIV RNA levels. Interferon-gamma and interleukin-5 responses to a mitogen were maintained or elevated. CONCLUSIONS: CMV-specific CD4 T-cell responses were found to decline after 3-5 years on HAART and may provide inadequate long-term protection against CMV disease in patients who are severely immunodeficient prior to treatment.
Keywords:antiretroviral therapy    cytomegalovirus    HIV-1    interferon-γ    T-cell responses
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