Structured antiretroviral treatment interruptions in chronically HIV-1-infected subjects

Gabriel M. Ortiz(Duke Medical Center), Melissa Wellons(Duke Medical Center), Jason Brancato(Duke Medical Center), Ha T. T. Vo(Duke Medical Center), Rebekah L. Zinn(Duke Medical Center), Daniel E. Clarkson(Duke Medical Center), Katherine Van Loon(Duke Medical Center), Sebastian Bonhoeffer(Duke Medical Center), G. Diego Miralles(Duke Medical Center), David C. Montefiori(Duke Medical Center), John Bartlett(Duke Medical Center), Douglas F. Nixon(Duke Medical Center)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 30, 2001
Cited by 159Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The risks and benefits of structured treatment interruption (STI) in HIV-1-infected subjects are not fully understood. A pilot study was performed to compare STI with continuous highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in chronic HIV-1-infected subjects with HIV-1 plasma RNA levels (VL) <400 copies per ml and CD4(+) T cells >400 per microl. CD4(+) T cells, VL, HIV-1-specific neutralizing antibodies, and IFN-gamma-producing HIV-1-specific CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells were measured in all subjects. STIs of 1-month duration separated by 1 month of HAART, before a final 3-month STI, resulted in augmented CD8(+) T cell responses in all eight STI subjects (P = 0.003), maintained while on HAART up to 22 weeks after STI, and augmented neutralization titers to autologous HIV-1 isolate in one of eight subjects. However, significant decline of CD4(+) T cell count from pre-STI level, and VL rebound to pre-HAART baseline, occurred during STI (P = 0.001 and 0.34, respectively). CD4(+) T cell counts were regained on return to HAART. Control subjects (n = 4) maintained VL <400 copies per ml and stable CD4(+) T cell counts, and showed no enhancement of antiviral CD8(+) T cell responses. Despite increases in antiviral immunity, no control of VL was observed. Future studies of STI should proceed with caution.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis