Publication | Closed Access
A Randomized Trial of High‐ versus Low‐Dose Subcutaneous Interleukin‐2 Outpatient Therapy for Early Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection
135
Citations
15
References
1999
Year
Primary ImmunodeficiencyTranslational MedicineHuman Immunodeficiency VirusTreatment And PreventionHuman RetrovirusImmunodeficienciesHigh-dose RecipientsImmunologyClinical TrialsAntiviral TherapyRandomized TrialCd4 CellsChronic Viral InfectionHivImmunotherapyMedicineCell Transplantation
Forty-nine outpatients infected with human immunodeficiency virus with baseline CD4 cell counts >/=500/mm3, who were on stable antiretroviral therapy, were randomized to receive 5-day cycles of either low-dose (1.5 million IU [MIU] twice a day) or high-dose (7.5 MIU twice a day) subcutaneous (sc) interleukin (IL)-2 every 4 or every 8 weeks. High-dose recipients experienced mean slopes of +116.1 cells/month and +2.7 %/month in CD4 cells and percents, respectively, whereas low-dose recipients displayed mean slopes of +26.7 and +1.3% in the same parameters. At month 6, high-dose recipients achieved a 94.8% increase in mean CD4 cells over baseline compared with a 19.0% increase in low-dose recipients. While high-dose recipients encountered more constitutional side effects, these were generally not dose-limiting. High-dose scIL-2 therapy in outpatients with early HIV-1 infection was well tolerated and induced dramatic, sustained rises in CD4 cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1