IAS: HCV therapy does not significantly effect immune recovery of patients taking HIV therapy

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Treatment for hepatitis C virus coinfection does not impair immune recovery in HIV-positive individuals who are taking potent antiretroviral therapy at the same time, a study presented to the recent International AIDS Society Conference in Sydney found.

There are conflicting data about the effect of hepatitis C virus coinfection on the immunological status of people with HIV. Although two studies have found that coinfection essentially has no negative impact on the immune systems of people with HIV, a third found that HIV-positive individuals with hepatitis C had smaller increases in their CD4 cell count after starting HIV therapy than patients who were only infected with HIV.

Investigators in New Jersey in the USA therefore examined changes in key markers of immune status in coinfected patients who were taking therapy for hepatitis C. All the patients were taking anti-HIV treatment and had a viral load below 50 copies/ml. Treatment for hepatitis C consisted of pegylated interferon and weight-adjusted ribavirin.

Glossary

naive

In HIV, an individual who is ‘treatment naive’ has never taken anti-HIV treatment before.

CD8

A molecule on the surface of some white blood cells. Some of these cells can kill other cells that are infected with foreign organisms.

memory cell

A long-lived lymphocyte that carries the antibody or receptor for a specific antigen (after a first exposure to this antigen) and remains in a less than mature state until a second exposure to the antigen, at which time it mounts a more effective immune response than a cell which has not been exposed previously. 

statistical significance

Statistical tests are used to judge whether the results of a study could be due to chance and would not be confirmed if the study was repeated. If result is probably not due to chance, the results are ‘statistically significant’. 

pegylated interferon

Pegylated interferon, also known as peginterferon, is a chemically modified form of the standard interferon, sometimes used to treat hepatitis B and C. The difference between interferon and peginterferon is the PEG, which stands for a molecule called polyethylene glycol. The PEG does nothing to fight the virus. But by attaching it to the interferon (which does fight the virus), the interferon will stay in the blood much longer. 

At baseline, the end of hepatitis C treatment, and at treatment follow-up, 24 weeks after the last doses of anti-hepatitis C therapy, investigators measured the patients’ CD4+ and CD8+ naïve and memory cells.

As expected, only a minority of patients (33%) achieved a sustained virological response to hepatitis C therapy.

When the investigators examined changes in CD4+ and CD8+ naïve and memory cells, they found that these did not alter significantly between baseline and treatment follow-up.

Six months after the completion of anti-hepatitis C therapy, CD+4 naïve cells had fallen by a mean of 8 cells/mm3 in patients who achieved a response to anti-hepatitis C treatment, and by a mean of 26 cells/mm3 in individuals who did not respond to treatment. Mean CD4+ memory cells fell by a mean of 20 cells/mm3 in treatment-responders and by 33 cells/mm3 in non-responders. CD8+ naïve cells fell by a mean of 17 cells/mm3 in those achieving a sustained virological response and by a mean of 49 cells/mm3 in non-responders. CD8+ memory cells showed a mean increase of 90 cells/mm3 in treatment-responders and a mean increase of 16 cells/mm3. None of these changes were statistically significant.

“This study demonstrates that immunological progression of HIV as evidenced by a change in both CD4+ and CD8+ naïve and memory cells is not significantly influenced by treatment for hepatitis C coinfection”, conclude the investigators.

References

Tolia J et al. Immunological progression of HIV in a population of treated hepatitis C coinfected patients. Fourth International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention, abstract MOPEB044, Sydney, 2007.