Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the HIV co-infected population. Interferon-alpha (IFN-α) remains a major component of anti-HCV therapy despite its deleterious effects on the immune system. Furthermore, IFN-α was recently shown to diminish the size of the latent HIV reservoir. The objectives of this study were to monitor the impact of IFN-α on T cell phenotype and proliferation of HIV and HCV-specific T cells during IFN therapy, and to identify immune markers that can predict the response to IFN in HICV/HIV co-infected patients. We performed longitudinal analyses of T cell numbers, phenotype and function in co-infected patients undergoing IFN-α therapy with different outcomes including IFN-α non-responders (NR) (n = 9) and patients who achieved sustained virologic response (SVR) (n = 19). We examined the expression of activation (CD38, HLA-DR), functional (CD127) and exhaustion markers (PD1, Tim-3, CD160 and CD244) on total CD4 and CD8 T cells before, during and after therapy. In addition, we examined the HIV- and HCV-specific proliferative responses against HIV-p24 and HCV-NS3 proteins. Frequencies of CD127+ CD4 T cells were higher in SVR than in NR patients at baseline. An increase in CD127 expression on CD8 T cells was observed after IFN-α therapy in all patients. In addition, CD8 T cells from NR patients expressed a higher exhaustion status at baseline. Finally, SVR patients exhibited higher proliferative response against both HIV and HCV antigens at baseline. Altogether, SVR correlated with higher expression of CD127, lower T cell exhaustion status and better HIV and HCV proliferative responses at baseline. Such factors might be used as non-invasive methods to predict the success of IFN–based therapies in co-infected individuals.

Highlights

  • 25% of all human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected individuals are co-infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) [1,2]

  • We examined the effect of IFN-a therapy on the immune functions of a group of 28 HCV/HIV co-infected patients recruited through the Canadian co-infection cohort study (CCC)

  • We demonstrated that CD127 expression was coupled with lower T cell exhaustion status and fibrosis

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Summary

Introduction

25% of all human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected individuals are co-infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) [1,2]. HIV infection accelerates the natural history of HCV and liver disease progression. Combination of anti-retroviral therapy (cART) has decreased mortality among HIV-infected individuals but rendered the effect of HCV-induced liver damage more visible and it is a major cause of mortality in this population [3]. The risk of liver failure is estimated to be 6 fold higher in co-infected individuals as compared to HCV monoinfected individuals [4]. This accelerated natural history correlates with the decline in CD4 T cell counts. The reduced frequency of helper CD4 T cells during HIV infection contributes to a reduction in HCV-specific humoral [5] and cellular responses in co-infected patients [6,7]. HCV/HIV co-infected patients exhibit higher circulating HCV RNA in peripheral blood [8,9,10], reduced rate of spontaneous resolution of HCV infection [11,12] and lower responsiveness (up to 30%) to IFN-based therapy [13,14]

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