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Impact of alemtuzumab on HIV persistence in an HIV-infected individual on antiretroviral therapy with Sezary syndrome

Authors :
Afam A. Okoye
Ashanti Dantanarayana
James H McMahon
Sharon R Lewin
Jori Symons
Michael Roche
Stephen J. Kent
Bonnie Hiener
H. Miles Prince
J Judy Chang
Carrie van der Weyden
Paul U. Cameron
Thomas A Rasmussen
Wen Shi Lee
Sarah Palmer
Source :
Rasmussen, T A, McMahon, J, Chang, J J, Symons, J, Roche, M, Dantanarayana, A, Okoye, A, Hiener, B, Palmer, S, Lee, W S, Kent, S J, Van Der Weyden, C, Prince, H M, Cameron, P U & Lewin, S R 2017, ' Impact of alemtuzumab on HIV persistence in an HIV-infected individual on antiretroviral therapy with Sezary syndrome ', AIDS, vol. 31, no. 13, pp. 1839-1845 . https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001540
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the effects of alemtuzumab on HIV persistence in an HIV-infected individual on antiretroviral therapy (ART) with Sezary syndrome, a rare malignancy of CD4 T cells.DESIGN: Case report.METHODS: Blood was collected 30 and 18 months prior to presentation with Sezary syndrome, at the time of presentation and during alemtuzumab. T-cell subsets in malignant (CD7-CD26-TCR-VBeta2+) and nonmalignant cells were quantified by flow cytometry. HIV-DNA in total CD4 T cells, in sorted malignant and nonmalignant CD4 T cells, was quantified by PCR and clonal expansion of HIV-DNA assessed by full-length next-generation sequencing.RESULTS: HIV-hepatitis B virus coinfection was diagnosed and antiretroviral therapy initiated 4 years prior to presentation with Sezary syndrome and primary cutaneous anaplastic large cell lymphoma. The patient received alemtuzumab 10 mg three times per week for 4 weeks but died 6 weeks post alemtuzumab. HIV-DNA was detected in nonmalignant but not in malignant CD4 T cells, consistent with expansion of a noninfected CD4 T-cell clone. Full-length HIV-DNA sequencing demonstrated multiple defective viruses but no identical or expanded sequences. Alemtuzumab extensively depleted T cells, including more than 1 log reduction in total T cells and more than 3 log reduction in CD4 T cells. Finally, alemtuzumab decreased HIV-DNA in CD4 T cells by 57% but HIV-DNA remained detectable at low levels even after depletion of nearly all CD4 T cells.CONCLUSION: Alemtuzumab extensively depleted multiple T-cell subsets and decreased the frequency of but did not eliminate HIV-infected CD4 T cells. Studying the effects on HIV persistence following immune recovery in HIV-infected individuals who require alemtuzumab for malignancy or in animal studies may provide further insights into novel cure strategies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Rasmussen, T A, McMahon, J, Chang, J J, Symons, J, Roche, M, Dantanarayana, A, Okoye, A, Hiener, B, Palmer, S, Lee, W S, Kent, S J, Van Der Weyden, C, Prince, H M, Cameron, P U & Lewin, S R 2017, ' Impact of alemtuzumab on HIV persistence in an HIV-infected individual on antiretroviral therapy with Sezary syndrome ', AIDS, vol. 31, no. 13, pp. 1839-1845 . https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001540
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb9842276385802a82bde7517571c749
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001540