Abstract
The effect of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) on mycobacterial antibody production was investigated. Using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for detecting IgG against Mycobacterium tuberculosis PPD, it was observed that individuals at risk of HIV infection show a pattern of humoral response to the tubercle bacillus similar to that previously found in the immunocompetent population not exposed to risk factors: 6 of 12 (50.0%) tuberculosis cases had elevated levels of antibodies to PPD and 27 of 30 (90.0%) asymptomatic individuals had antibody levels within the normal range. In an HIV-seropositive group without AIDS indicator diseases, 8 of 22 (36.4%) tuberculous patients had detectable mycobacterial antibodies whereas 156 of 164 (95.1%) non-tuberculous subjects did not. Among AIDS cases, only 1 of 20 (5.0%) patients with tuberculosis and none of 53 non-tuberculous subjects showed a positive result. The study evidenced an increasing humoral unresponsiveness to PPD in the progression of HIV infection to AIDS. Thus, a serodiagnostic method for detecting tuberculosis such as the ELISA here employed noticeably decreases its utility in the latency stage of the HIV infection, and it is practically useless in clinical AIDS.
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