Background: Antiretroviral therapy is provided by the Brazilian Ministry of Health to eligible HIV-infected individuals. Based on clinical and immunological classification, the Brazilian guidelines recommend dual or triple therapy for children. However, the development of drug-resistant strains or poor adherence to therapy could impact the efficacy of this approach.

Objectives: We examined relationships between RNA levels, CD4+ T-cell counts, treatment history, and the prevalence of drug-resistant variants in a cohort of HIV-1-infected children in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Study Design: Direct sequencing of reverse transcriptase and protease genes from plasma was performed. Virologic and CD4+ T-cell counts responses to therapy were assessed by changes in HIV-1 RNA levels and CD4+ T-cell counts from baseline.

Results: Thirty-seven patients were receiving dual therapy and 38 were on triple therapy at enrollment, segregated by antiretroviral history. Both groups had a higher increase in CD4+ T cell counts and a lower viral load in pre-treatment antiretroviral-naïve subjects. Notably, there was a direct correlation between the higher frequencies of drug-resistance mutations and cross-resistance with previous usage of antiretroviral (ARV) therapy in both groups. Non-B subtypes isolates were found in 21.3% of samples. A smaller increase in CD4+ T cell counts was found between non-B subtypes when compared to B-subtypes.

Conclusions: These results suggest that less immunological recovery and a higher number of mutations related to drug resistance were associated with previous usage of ARV and consequent higher time under drug selective pressure in these HIV-infected Brazilian children. These facts suggest the preferential use of triple drug combination as first line regimen in children.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2003.08.001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cd4+ t-cell
12
t-cell counts
12
brazilian children
8
dual triple
8
therapy
8
triple therapy
8
rna levels
8
levels cd4+
8
increase cd4+
8
cd4+ cell
8

Similar Publications

The advent of spatial transcriptomics and spatial proteomics have enabled profound insights into tissue organization to provide systems-level understanding of diseases. Both technologies currently remain largely independent, and emerging same slide spatial multi-omics approaches are generally limited in plex, spatial resolution, and analytical approaches. We introduce IN-situ DEtailed Phenotyping To High-resolution transcriptomics (IN-DEPTH), a streamlined and resource-effective approach compatible with various spatial platforms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The significance of endogenous immune surveillance in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) remains controversial. Using clinical B-ALL samples and a novel mouse model, we show that neoantigen-specific CD4+ T cells are induced to adopt type-1 regulatory (Tr1) function in the leukemia microenvironment. Tr1s then inhibit cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, preventing effective leukemia clearance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: The T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire of intestinal CD4+ T cells is enriched for specificity towards microbiome-encoded epitopes shared among many microbiome members, providing broad microbial reactivity from a limited pool of cells. These cells actively coordinate mutualistic host-microbiome interactions, yet many epitopes are shared between gut symbionts and closely related pathobionts and pathogens. Given the disparate impacts of these agents on host health, intestinal CD4+ T cells must maintain strain-level discriminatory power to ensure protective immunity while preventing inappropriate responses against symbionts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transcription repressor BACH2 redirects short-lived terminally differentiated effector into long-lived memory cells. We postulate that BACH2-mediated long-lived memory programs promote HIV-1 persistence in gut CD4+ T cells. We coupled single-cell DOGMA-seq and TREK-seq to capture chromatin accessibility, transcriptome, surface proteins, T cell receptor, HIV-1 DNA and HIV-1 RNA in 100,744 gut T cells from ten aviremic HIV-1+ individuals and five HIV-1- donors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: How changes in the quality of anti-viral antibody (Ab) responses due to pre-existing or acquired CD4 T cell insufficiency affect virus evolution during persistent infection are unknown. Using mouse polyomavirus (MuPyV), we found that CD4 T cell depletion before infection results in short-lived plasma cells secreting low-avidity antiviral IgG with limited BCR diversity and weak virus-neutralizing ability. CD4 T cell deficiency during persistent infection incurs a shift from a T-dependent (TD) to T-independent (TI) Ab response, resembling the pre-existing TI Ab response.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!