Shorter survival in advanced human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infectionis more closely associated with T lymphocyte activation than with plasma virus burden or virus chemokine coreceptor usage
Jv. Giorgi et al., Shorter survival in advanced human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infectionis more closely associated with T lymphocyte activation than with plasma virus burden or virus chemokine coreceptor usage, J INFEC DIS, 179(4), 1999, pp. 859-870
To define predictors of survival time in late human immunodeficiency virus
type 1 (HIV-1) disease, long- and short-duration survivors were studied aft
er their CD4(+) T cells fell to less than or equal to 50/mm(3). Immune acti
vation of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, as measured by elevated cell surface e
xpression of CD38 antigen, was strongly associated with shorter subsequent
survival (P less than or equal to.002), The naive CD45RA(+)CD62L(+) T cell
reserve was low in all subjects and did not predict survival (P=.34 for CD4
(+) and .08 for CD8(+) cells). Higher virus burden correlated with CD8(+) b
ut not CD4(+) cell activation and, after correcting for multiple comparison
s, was not associated with shorter survival (P=.02), All of the patients' v
iruses used CCR5, CXCR4, or both, and coreceptor usage did not predict surv
ival (P=.27), Through mechanisms apparently unrelated to higher virus burde
n, immune activation is a major determinant of survival in advanced HIV-1 d
isease.