Publication | Open Access
Immunological Response to Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Children with Clinically Stable HIV‐1 Infection
33
Citations
28
References
2005
Year
ImmunologyHiv-1-infected ChildrenImmunodominanceImmunotherapyHuman RetrovirusNaive MarkersPrimary ImmunodeficiencyAutoimmune DiseaseNeurovirologyActive Antiretroviral TherapyAutoimmunityChronic Viral InfectionHivAids PathogenesisTreatment And PreventionPediatricsAntiviral ResponseAntiviral TherapyImmunological ResponseMedicineViral Immunity
We studied changes in 60 immunological parameters after the administration of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in 192 clinically stable antiretroviral drug-experienced HIV-1-infected children 4 months-17 years old. The studied immunological parameters included standard lymphocyte subsets and lymphocyte surface markers of maturation and activation. The most significant changes during the 48-week study period were seen for CD8(+), CD8(+)CD62L(+)CD45RA(+), CD8(+)CD38(+)HLA-DR(+), and CD4(+) T cell percentages (P < .0001 for all parameters). These changes suggest that significant decreases in the expression of activation markers and increases in the expression of naive markers in the CD8(+) T cell population may be related to better virologic control in these HIV-1-infected children, who had relatively stable immune function at the initiation of HAART. At week 44 of HAART, the major immunological parameters in these HIV-1-infected children moved from baseline values to about halfway to two-thirds of the way toward the values in healthy, uninfected children.
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