HIV persists in the gut despite prolonged therapy
February 14th, 2008 - 3:04 pm ICT by admin
Washington, Feb 14 (ANI): A new NIAID study has found that HIV can persist in the gut despite long-term treatment with antiretroviral drugs.
Doctors have not been able to eliminate the virus from infected individuals despite effective anti-HIV therapies, mainly because of the persistence of HIV in hideouts known as viral reservoirs.
One important reservoir where HIV causes much of its damage is the gut. The damage is caused to due to the large number of HIV target cells that reside there. These cells, known as CD4+ T cells, are largely contained in lymph nodes and patches of lymphocytes that collectively are called gut-associated lymphoid tissue, or GALT.
Since the gut is important to HIV disease, scientists hoped that a prolonged treatment with antiretroviral drugs could eliminate HIV from the GALT.
However, the new study has found that this goal seems unlikely with present antiretroviral drugs.
For the study, Tae-Wook Chun, Ph.D., of the NIAID Laboratory of Immunoregulation (LIR), Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., LIR chief and NIAID director and their colleagues intensively studied eight patients receiving effective antiretroviral therapy for up to 9.9 years.
In all these individuals, therapy had consistently kept their blood levels of HIV at undetectable levels. However, sensitive tests detected the persistence of HIV as well as lowered CD4+ T cell levels in the GALT that did not completely rebound in response to therapy.
The researchers found that levels of virus were higher in the GALT than in immune cells in the blood, where HIV also was consistently found. They also found evidence of cross infection between the GALT and the lymphocytes in the blood, suggesting that one reason the virus persists in the blood is because of ongoing cycles of replication in the GALT.
The researchers concluded that any possibility of further lowering or eliminating viral reservoirs likely will require more powerful drug regimens to stop the low levels of ongoing viral replication originating in the GALT.
Another study from the Fauci laboratory, conducted by Susan Moir, Ph.D., and her colleagues provided additional insights into the effects of antiretroviral therapy on the HIV disease process.
In most people with HIV, the virus replicates at high levels and CD4+ T-cell numbers decline. These two factors also strongly affect B cells, the cells of the immune system that make antibodies and help protect against infection.
Dr. Moir and her colleagues demonstrated that prior to treatment with antiretroviral therapy, B-cell numbers in the blood of HIV-infected individuals who have been infected for several years are low, and the B cells also include several dysfunctional subsets.
After conducting one year of effective treatment with antiretroviral therapy, B-cell numbers returned to normal, and several of the dysfunctional subsets also normalized. However, those B-cells that provide long-term protection against infection–so-called memory B cells–did not return to normal levels.
The researchers noted that these findings support the notion that while antiretroviral therapy improves many aspects of immune function in HIV-infected individuals, important deficiencies remain, especially in individuals who wait several years before initiating therapy.
The study is published online by The Journal of Infectious Diseases. (ANI)
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