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HIV type 1 (HIV-1) proviral reservoirs decay continuously under sustained virologic control in HIV-1

Posted on May 21, 2014

Source: the Journal of Infectious Diseases

HIV type 1 (HIV-1) proviral reservoirs decay continuously under sustained virologic control in HIV-1

HIV type 1 (HIV-1) proviral reservoirs decay continuously under sustained virologic control in HIV-1-infected children who received early treatment

 

Luzuriaga K, Tabak B, Garber M, Chen YH, Ziemniak C, McManus MM, Murray D, Strain MC, Richman DD, Chun TW, Cunningham CK, Persaud D

BACKGROUND:
Early initiation of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected infants controls HIV-1 replication and reduces mortality.

METHODS:
Plasma viremia (lower limit of detection, <2 copies/mL), T-cell activation, HIV-1-specific immune responses, and the persistence of cells carrying replication-competent virus were quantified during long-term effective combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) in 4 perinatally HIV-1-infected youth who received treatment early (the ET group) and 4 who received treatment late (the LT group). Decay in peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) proviral DNA levels was also measured over time in the ET youth.

RESULTS:
Plasma viremia was not detected in any ET youth but was detected in all LT youth (median, 8 copies/mL; P = .03). PBMC proviral load was significantly lower in ET youth (median, 7 copies per million PBMCs) than in LT youth (median, 181 copies; P = .03). Replication-competent virus was recovered from all LT youth but only 1 ET youth. Decay in proviral DNA was noted in all 4 ET youth in association with limited T-cell activation and with absent to minimal HIV-1-specific immune responses.

CONCLUSIONS:
Initiation of early effective cART during infancy significantly limits circulating levels of proviral and replication-competent HIV-1 and promotes continuous decay of viral reservoirs. Continued cART with reduction in HIV-1 reservoirs over time may facilitate HIV-1 eradication strategies.

 

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