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Immune modulatory effects of cyclooxygenase type 2 inhibitors in HIV patients on combination antiretroviral treatment

Authors :
Pål Aukrust
Carl Christian Johansson
Vidar Ormaasen
Einar Martin Aandahl
Stig S. Frøland
Dag Kvale
Anne-Marte Bakken Kran
Kjetil Taskén
Source :
AIDS (London, England). 20(6)
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

OBJECTIVES To examine the immune modulating effects of cyclooxygenase type 2 (COX-2) inhibitors (COX-2i) in HIV-infected patients on combination antiretroviral treatment (CART). DESIGN In-depth substudy from an approved, open, controlled, randomized study comparing the immune modulating effects of CART in combination with COX-2i after 12 weeks. METHODS Patients (n = 38) on long-term CART with stable viral load (VL) 100/microl were randomized to CART and rofecoxib 25 mg bid (n = 12) or celecoxib 400 mg bid (n = 12), or CART only without placebo (n = 14). Routine clinical chemistry, CD4+ and CD8+ counts and VL were safety parameters. Immunological parameters included C-reactive protein, beta2-microglobulin, Ig isotypes and IgG subclasses as well as several T-lymphocyte subsets. Non-parametric analyses were used throughout. RESULTS Prestudy experiments showed higher median intracellular expression of COX-2 in CD4+ (P = 0.048) and possibly CD8+ (P = 0.09) T cells from patients on CART compared with uninfected controls. In the clinical study, increased CD4+ T-cell counts were observed only in patients on COX-2i with VL < 50 copies/ml (P = 0.02). Decreased expression of CD38+ on CD8+ T cells and subsets as well as reductions in IgA and IgM (P < 0.03) were most pronounced in patients on COX-2i who had detectable VL (n = 6). COX-2i treatment enhanced the perforin content particularly in the differentiated CD27-/CD8+ T-cell subsets compared with controls (P = 0.05). CONCLUSIONS COX-2i together with CART improved markers for persistent immune activation, particularly in patients with viraemia, as well as enhanced perforin expression, and thereby strengthened COX-2 as a potential therapeutic target in HIV infection.

Details

ISSN :
02699370
Volume :
20
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS (London, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....550f76675016a658719963223ff603ff