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51. Liver Stiffness Hinders Normalization of Systemic Inflammation and Endothelial Activation after Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Eradication in HIV/HCV Coinfected Patients.

52. HCV-coinfection is related to an increased HIV-1 reservoir size in cART-treated HIV patients: a cross-sectional study.

53. A high mucosal blocking score is associated with HIV protection.

54. Proteomic Profile Associated With Loss of Spontaneous Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Elite Control.

55. A Knockout IFNL4 Variant Is Associated With Protection From Sexually Transmitted HIV-1 Infection.

56. Mitochondrial haplogroup H is related to CD4+ T cell recovery in HIV infected patients starting combination antiretroviral therapy.

57. CD32 Expression is not Associated to HIV-DNA content in CD4 cell subsets of individuals with Different Levels of HIV Control.

58. Peering into the HIV reservoir.

59. High Plasma Levels of sTNF-R1 and CCL11 Are Related to CD4+ T-Cells Fall in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Elite Controllers With a Sustained Virologic Control.

60. Expression of PD-1 and Tim-3 markers of T-cell exhaustion is associated with CD4 dynamics during the course of untreated and treated HIV infection.

61. Class-modeling analysis reveals T-cell homeostasis disturbances involved in loss of immune control in elite controllers.

62. Factors Leading to the Loss of Natural Elite Control of HIV-1 Infection.

63. Role of APOBEC3H in the Viral Control of HIV Elite Controller Patients.

64. Peripheral T follicular helper Cells Make a Difference in HIV Reservoir Size between Elite Controllers and Patients on Successful cART.

65. Both Hepatitis C Virus-Specific T Cell Responses and IL28B rs12979860 Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Genotype Influence Antihepatitis C Virus Treatment Outcome in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C.

66. HCV coinfection contributes to HIV pathogenesis by increasing immune exhaustion in CD8 T-cells.

67. Relationship of TRIM5 and TRIM22 polymorphisms with liver disease and HCV clearance after antiviral therapy in HIV/HCV coinfected patients.

68. IL15 polymorphism is associated with advanced fibrosis, inflammation-related biomarkers and virological response in human immunodeficiency virus/hepatitis C virus coinfection.

69. Short Communication: CXCL12 rs1029153 Polymorphism Is Associated with the Sustained Virological Response in HIV/Hepatitis C Virus-Coinfected Patients on Hepatitis C Virus Therapy.

70. Balance between activation and regulation of HIV-specific CD8+ T-cell response after modified vaccinia Ankara B therapeutic vaccination.

71. TLR3 polymorphisms are associated with virologic response to hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment in HIV/HCV coinfected patients.

72. Safety and immunogenicity of a modified vaccinia Ankara-based HIV-1 vaccine (MVA-B) in HIV-1-infected patients alone or in combination with a drug to reactivate latent HIV-1.

73. PPARγ2 Pro12Ala polymorphism is associated with sustained virological response in HIV/HCV-coinfected patients under HCV therapy.

74. Central memory CD4 T cells are associated with incomplete restoration of the CD4 T cell pool after treatment-induced long-term undetectable HIV viraemia.

75. Prevalence of HIV-1 dual infection in long-term nonprogressor-elite controllers.

76. HLA-E variants are associated with sustained virological response in HIV/hepatitis C virus-coinfected patients on hepatitis C virus therapy.

77. Analysis of IL28B alleles with virologic response patterns and plasma cytokine levels in HIV/HCV-coinfected patients.

78. Prediction of response to pegylated interferon plus ribavirin in HIV/hepatitis C virus (HCV)-coinfected patients using HCV genotype, IL28B variations, and HCV-RNA load.

79. Mechanisms involved in CD4 cell gains in HIV-infected patients switched to raltegravir.

80. Pharmacogenetics of hepatitis C.

81. Soluble markers of inflammation are associated with Framingham scores in HIV-infected patients on suppressive antiretroviral therapy.

82. Impact of IL28B polymorphisms on response to peginterferon and ribavirin in HIV–hepatitis C virus-coinfected patients with prior nonresponse or relapse.

83. Elite controllers display higher activation on central memory CD8 T cells than HIV patients successfully on HAART.

84. Modeling the probability of sustained virological response to therapy with pegylated interferon plus ribavirin in patients coinfected with hepatitis C virus and HIV.

85. HIV rebound after discontinuation of antiretroviral therapy increases and expands HIV-specific CD8+ responses but has no impact on its functionality.

86. Suppression of viral replication with highly active antiretroviral therapy has no impact on the functional profile of HIV-specific CD8(+) T cells.

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