Only limited data on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) HIV-I RNA responses and mark
ers of local inflammation in CSF during antiretroviral therapy are availabl
e. HIV-RNA, soluble tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-receptor (sTNFr)-II, monocy
te chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1, and interferon-gamma -inducible protein
(IP)-10 were measured in the peripheral blood and CSF of 26 antiretroviral
-naive HIV-1-positive patients, who were treated with ritonavir (RTV)/saqui
navir (SQV) (n = 5), RTV/SQV/stavudine (d4T; n = 8) or zidovudine (AZT)/lam
ivudine (3TC)/abacavir/nevirapine/indinavir (n = 13). After 8 to 12 weeks o
f treatment, CSF HIV-RNA dropped to <400 copies/ml in 1 of 5 patients in th
e RTV/SQV group, 8 of 8 patients in the RTV/SQV/d4T group, and 9 of 10 pati
ents in the five-drug group. CSF sTNFr-II and IP-10 levels increased in pat
ients with detectable CSF HIV-RNA. However, increases in CSF chemokine and
sTNFr-II concentrations were also observed in some patients with good CSF H
IV-RNA responses. Moreover, CSF MCP-1 concentrations increased in the whole
population after 2 months of treatment. Ongoing residual HIV replication i
n the central nervous system, which cannot be detected with CSF HIV-RNA mea
surements, may account for this phenomenon.