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Treatment during primary HIV infection does not lower viral set point but improves CD4 lymphocytes in an observational cohort.

Authors :
Koegl C
Wolf E
Hanhoff N
Jessen H
Schewe K
Rausch M
Goelz J
Goetzenich A
Knechten H
Jaeger H
Becker W
Becker-Boost I
Berzow D
Beiniek B
Brust J
Shcuster D
Dupke S
Fenske S
Gellermann HJ
Gippert R
Hartmann P
Hintsche B
Jaeger H
Jaegel-Guedes E
Jessen H
Gölz J
Koelzsch J
Helm EB
Knecht G
Knechten H
Lochet I
Gute P
Mauruschat S
Mauss S
Miasnikov V
Mosthaf FA
Rausch M
Freiwald M
Reuter B
Schalk HM
Schappert B
Schnaitmann E
Schneider I
Schüler-Maué W
Schuler C
Seidel T
Starke W
Ulmer A
Müller M
Weitner I
Schewe K
Zamani C
Hanmond A
Ross K
Bottlaender A
Hoffmann C
Dix A
Schneidewind A
Lademann M
Source :
European journal of medical research [Eur J Med Res] 2009 Jul 22; Vol. 14 (7), pp. 277-83.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Objective: To investigate if early treatment of primary HIV-1 infection (PHI) reduces viral set point and/or increases CD4 lymphocytes.<br />Methods: Analysis of two prospective multi-centre PHI cohorts. HIV-1 RNA and CD4 lymphocytes in patients with transient treatment were compared to those in untreated patients. Time to CD4 lymphocyte decrease below 350/ microl after treatment stop or seroconversion was calculated using Kaplan-Meier and Cox-PH-regression analyses.<br />Results: 156 cases of PHI were included, of which 100 had received transient HAART (median treatment time 9.5 months) and 56 remained untreated. Median viral load (563000 cop/ml vs 240000 cop/ml; p<0.001) and median CD4 lymphocyte (449/ microl vs. 613/ microl; p<0.01) differed significantly between treated and untreated patients. Median viral load was 38056 copies/ml in treated patients (12 months after treatment stop) and 52880 copies/ml in untreated patients (12 months after seroconversion; ns). Median CD4 lymphocyte change was +60/ microl vs. -86/ microl (p = 0.01). Median time until CD4 lymphocytes decreased to <350/ microl (including all patients with CD4 lymphocytes <500/ microl during seroconversion) was 20.7 months in treated patients after treatment stop and 8.3 months in untreated patents after seroconversion (p<0.01). Cox-PH analyses adjusting for baseline VL, CD4 lymphocytes, stage of early infection and symptoms confirmed these differences.<br />Conclusions: Treatment during PHI did not lower viral set point. However, patients treated during seroconversion had an increase in CD4 lymphocytes, whereas untreated patients experienced a decrease in CD4 lymphocytes. Time until reaching CD4 lymphocytes <350/ microl was significantly shorter in untreated than in treated patients including patients with CD4 lymphocytes <500/ microl during seroconversion.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0949-2321
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of medical research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19661009
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/2047-783x-14-7-277