Cellular Levels of HIV Unspliced RNA from Patients on Combination Antiretroviral Therapy with Undetectable Plasma Viremia Predict the Therapy Outcome

Open Access
Authors
  • A.O. Pasternak
  • S. Jurriaans
  • M. Bakker
  • J.M. Prins
  • B. Berkhout
  • V.V. Lukashov
Publication date 2009
Journal PLoS ONE
Volume | Issue number 4 | 12
Pages (from-to) e8490
Organisations
  • Faculty of Medicine (AMC-UvA)
Abstract
Background: Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), the standard of care for HIV-1 infection, is considered to be successful when plasma viremia remains below the detection limit of commercial assays. Yet, cART fails in a substantial proportion of patients after the apparent success. No laboratory markers are known that are predictive of cART outcome in initial responders during the period of undetectable plasma viremia. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we report the results of a retrospective longitudinal study of twenty-six HIV-infected individuals who initially responded to cART by having plasma viremia suppressed to <50 copies/ml. Eleven of these patients remained virologically suppressed, whereas fifteen experienced subsequent cART failure. Using sensitive methods based on seminested real-time PCR, we measured the levels of HIV-1 proviral (pr) DNA, unspliced ( us) RNA, and multiply spliced RNA in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of these patients at multiple time points during the period of undetectable plasma viremia on cART. Median under-therapy level of usRNA was significantly higher (0.43 log(10) difference, P = 0.0015) in patients who experienced subsequent cART failure than in successfully treated patients. In multivariate analysis, adjusted for baseline CD4(+) counts, prior ART experience, and particular cART regimens, the maximal usRNA level under therapy was the best independent predictor of subsequent therapy failure ( adjusted odds ratio [95% CI], 24.4 [1.5-389.5], P = 0.024). The only other factor significantly associated with cART failure was prior ART experience ( adjusted odds ratio [ 95% CI], 12.3 [1.1-138.4], P = 0.042). Levels of usRNA under cART inversely correlated with baseline CD4(+) counts ( P = 0.0003), but did not correlate with either baseline usRNA levels or levels of prDNA under therapy. Conclusion: Our data demonstrate that the level of HIV-1 usRNA in PBMC, measured in cART-treated patients with undetectable plasma viremia, is a strong predictive marker for the outcome of therapy
Document type Article
Published at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008490
Downloads
322884.pdf (Final published version)
Permalink to this page
Back