Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that the pathogenesis of HIV-1 is different from that of HIV-2. Thus, we have measured, longitudinally at various times over a median follow-up of 2.1 years, the percentage CD4+ cells of 94 patients infected with HIV-1 and 164 patients infected with HIV-2. The pattern of decline of CD4% over time was linear for patients with either infection. Multilevel statistical modeling techniques showed that after stratifying for HIV status, the rate of decline of CD4% was faster among patients who died than among those who survived (difference in rate of decline = 2.34% CD4+ cells/year; p = 0.0002). After stratifying for survival status, the rate of decline was faster and less variable among patients infected with HIV-1 than among patients infected with HIV-2 (difference in rate of decline = 1.12% CD4+ cells/year; p = 0.05). The proportion of patients who showed no fall in CD4+ cells was higher in HIV-2 than in HIV-1 infection (p = 0.026). These data suggest fundamental differences between the two infections, with HIV-1 being more pathogenic resulting in a faster and more homogeneous rate of decline than HIV-2. In HIV-2 infection, disease in many patients progresses slowly, but in some the advance is just as fast as that in HIV-1 infection. The reasons for this marked heterogeneity need elucidation to understand the disease and to target therapeutic interventions against HIV-2 in those most at risk.

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