Abstract
Not all HIV-infected patients receiving cART are able to recover optimal CD4-T cell levels despite achieving undetectable viremia. We evaluated the potential association between polymorphisms (SNPs) in cytokines involved in immune response (IL15, IFNγ and IL19) and the failure to achieve optimal CD4 T-cells restoration after cART. For this, we carried out a retrospective study in 412 HIV-infected patients starting cART with CD4<200 cells/μL. These patients were classified as immunological non-responders (INR) if having a CD4 increase (ΔCD4) below 200 cells/μL after two years on successful cART. IL15, IFNγ and IL19 polymorphisms were genotyped using Sequenom's MassARRAY platform. We found 134 INR patients with a median [IQR] ΔCD4 = 133[73–174] cells/μL. In the multivariate analysis adjusted for age, sex, infection route, ethnic origin, hepatitis co-infection and HIV infection length, the AA genotype of the SNP rs2430561 in IFNγ (OR:2.01[1.13–3.56], p = 0.017) and the TT genotype of polymorphism rs2243191 in IL19 (OR:2.58 [1.17–5.68], p = 0.019) showed significant association with the INR status. Our results show that polymorphisms in IFNγ and IL19 genes significantly impacts in the probability of not achieving an optimal immune recovery in HIV-patients starting cART with CD4 T-cells <200 cells/μL. Thus, these SNPs could represent potential predictive markers of the immunodiscordant response.
Published Version
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