Abstract

Identifying early predictors of infection outcome is important for the clinical management of HIV infection, and both viral load and CD4+ T cell level have been found to be useful predictors of subsequent disease progression. Very high viral load or extensively depleted CD4+ T cells in the acute phase often result in failure of immune control, and a fast progression to AIDS. It is usually assumed that extensive loss of CD4+ T cells in the acute phase of HIV infection prevents the establishment of robust T cell help required for virus control in the chronic phase. We tested this hypothesis using viral load and CD4+ T cell number of SHIV-infected rhesus macaques. In acute infection, the lowest level of CD4+ T cells was a good predictor of later survival; animals having less than 3.3% of baseline CD4+ T cells progressed to severe disease, while animals with more than 3.3% of baseline CD4+ T cells experienced CD4+ T cell recovery. However, it is unclear if the disease progression was caused by early depletion, or was simply a result of a higher susceptibility of an animal to infection. We derived a simple relationship between the expected number of CD4+ T cells in the acute and chronic phases for a constant level of host susceptibility or resistance. We found that in most cases, the depletion of CD4+ T cells in chronic infection was consistent with the prediction from the acute CD4+ T cell loss. However, the animals with less than 3.3% of baseline CD4 T cells in the acute phase were approximately 20% more depleted late in the infection than expected based on constant level of virus control. This suggests that severe acute CD4 depletion indeed impairs the immune response.

Highlights

  • The disease course in untreated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection consists of an early acute phase characterized by extremely high viral loads and depletion of CD4+ T cells, followed by a largely asymptomatic chronic phase with more moderate viral loads and a slow loss of CD4+ T cell pool after partial recovery, and emergence of immunodeficiency, opportunistic infections and death

  • Predicting survival based on viral load and CD4+ T cell number In Figure 1 we show the longitudinal data for CD4+ T cell count in peripheral blood compared to baseline (A) and plasma viral load (B) for the 35 monkeys from the Shiver et al study [13]

  • Better preservation of CD4+ T cells in the acute phase of SHIV and SIV infection of rhesus macaques has been observed to lead to better CD4 recovery and improved outcome of the disease later on [2,3], even when the acute CD4 preservation was a consequence of early interventions

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Summary

Introduction

The disease course in untreated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection consists of an early acute phase characterized by extremely high viral loads and depletion of CD4+ T cells, followed by a largely asymptomatic chronic phase with more moderate viral loads and a slow loss of CD4+ T cell pool after partial recovery, and emergence of immunodeficiency, opportunistic infections and death. Despite the differences in the disease course in the three types of untreated infections, prolonged survival in HIV-1 [1], SIVmac [2] and SHIV [3] was found to be linked to better viral control and CD4+ T cell recovery during chronic phase. This is commonly explained by the fact that CD4+ T cells play an important role in immune control, providing help for both antibodies and CD8+ T cells responses, which act to control infection. The development of AIDS may occur when the density of CD4+ T cells drops below a limit necessary to provide help (the threshold being around 200 cells/mL of blood for HIV infection), leading to functional defects in CD8+ T cells and antibody-producing B cells

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