GBV-C viremia is associated with reduced CD4 expansion in HIV-infected people receiving HAART and interleukin-2 therapy

Jack T. Stapleton, Kathryn Chaloner(Actuarial Foundation), Jingyang Zhang(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Donna Klinzman(Iowa City VA Medical Center), Inara E. Souza(University of Iowa), Jinhua Xiang(Iowa City VA Medical Center), Alan Landay(University of California, Los Angeles), John L. Fahey(University of California, Los Angeles), Richard B. Pollard(Office of Infectious Diseases), Ronald T. Mitsuyasu(University of California, Los Angeles)
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a cytokine with multiple effects on lymphocytes including induction of CD4 T-cell proliferation. IL-2 administration has been shown to increase CD4 cell counts in HIV-infected people receiving antiretroviral therapy. GB virus C (GBV-C) is an apparently nonpathogenic flavivirus that replicates in CD4 T cells and inhibits HIV replication in vitro by mechanisms including downregulation of HIV entry coreceptors (CCR5 and CXCR4) and induction of chemokines (RANTES, MIP-1alpha, MIP-1 beta, and SDF-1). GBV-C replication is significantly inhibited in vitro by activation of primary CD4 cell cultures with IL-2 and phytohemagglutinin. We sought to determine if there is an interaction between GBV-C and IL-2 in vivo. METHODS: GBV-C viremia status was characterized in 92 HIV-infected individuals participating in a randomized trial of IL-2 and antiretroviral therapy [AIDS Clinical Trials Group Study (ACTG) 328]. Changes in CD4 cell counts and HIV RNA levels in individuals assigned IL-2 were compared with those in individuals assigned antiretroviral therapy alone. RESULTS: Individuals lacking GBV-C viremia had a significantly greater rise in CD4 cell count with IL-2, compared with GBV-C viremic individuals (by 511 cells/microl at week 84; interaction P = 0.02): GBV-C viremic individuals assigned IL-2 did not demonstrate a significant increase in CD4 cell count compared with individuals not assigned to receive IL-2 (95% CI for difference -255 to 397 cells/microl). CONCLUSION: GBV-C viremia was associated with a block in CD4 cell expansion following IL-2 therapy in the ACTG 328 study, and GBV-C status may be an important factor in IL-2 treatment response.


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