Even Individuals Considered as Long-Term Nonprogressors Show Biological Signs of Progression After 10 Years of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection
Open Access
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Society of Hematology in Blood
- Vol. 90 (3) , 1133-1140
- https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v90.3.1133
Abstract
Despite a decade of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seropositivity, a few individuals termed as long-term nonprogressors (LTNPs) maintain a stable CD4+ T-cell count for a period of time. The aim of this study was to establish, through the sequential determination of all known predictors of HIV disease, the proportion of such patients having stringent criteria of true long-term nonprogression. Among 249 individuals who were HIV-infected and prospectively followed up over a 10-year period (1985 to 1995), 12 having a CD4+ T-cell count greater than 500/μL (LTNP I group) and 9 having a CD4+ T-cell count less than 500 but stable over time (LTNP II group) after at least 10 years of infection without intervention of antiviral therapy, were studied over the entire follow-up period. The plasma HIV RNA copy number and the serum concentrations of p24 antigen, each anti-HIV antibody, neopterin, β-2-microglobulin, Immunoglobulin (Ig) G and IgA were determined every 18 months over the study period. Cellular and plasma viremias were cross-sectionaly assayed in all 21 patients. Only two patients had strictly no marker of progression over the follow-up period. They were the only ones who had, over the 10-year period, a viral copy number too low to be detected. The other patients had a viral copy number higher than 400/mL at at least one visit and increasing over the follow-up period, and they evidenced one or more markers of virological or immunological deterioration. Cellular viremia was positive in all patients but two, while plasma viremia was negative in all but one. The population of individuals termed as LTNPs is not virologically and immunologically homogeneous. The majority present biological signs of HIV disease progression. A new pattern of true LTNP can be drawn through stringent criteria based on the whole known predictors. This pattern appears to be rare in HIV-positive population.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantitation of HIV-1 RNA in Plasma Predicts Outcome after SeroconversionAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1995
- Virologic and Immunologic Characterization of Long-Term Survivors of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Rapid turnover of plasma virions and CD4 lymphocytes in HIV-1 infectionNature, 1995
- Viral dynamics in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infectionNature, 1995
- Long-term HIV-1 infection without immunologic progressionAIDS, 1994
- Characteristics of Long-Term Asymptomatic Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in Men with Normal and Low CD4+ Cell CountsThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1994
- The characterization of non-progressorsAIDS, 1993
- HIV infection is active and progressive in lymphoid tissue during the clinically latent stage of diseaseNature, 1993
- Long-term symptomless HIV-1 infection in recipients of blood products from a single donorThe Lancet, 1992
- Susceptibility to AIDS progression appears early in HIV infectionAIDS, 1990