OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to compare accepted surrogate markers of HIV disease progression with markers of lymphocyte apoptosis in their ability to predict short-term disease progression. METHODS: In all, 40 HIV-positive patients were studied prospectively and observed during follow-up for HIV-related adverse clinical events. Ex vivo apoptosis was measured with the markers CD95 expression, annexin V binding, and Apostain dye uptake by flow cytometry at baseline. Established markers of disease progression (CD4 count, HIV-RNA level, and CD8/38 count), CD8, B-cell, and natural killer (NK) cell counts were determined by standard procedures at baseline and after 6 months. RESULTS: In HIV-infected patients, CD95 expression and annexin V binding showed significantly elevated apoptosis in peripheral blood lymphocytes and all lymphocyte subsets at baseline compared with HIV-negative, healthy controls. Apostain failed to differentiate between HIV-infected patients and healthy controls. HIV-related complications could be predicted by CD4 and CD8/38 counts, but not HIV viral load as assessed by relative operating characteristic (ROC) analysis (CD4, p = .003; CD8/38, p = .031). A similar or even better diagnostic accuracy was found for CD95 expression in total lymphocytes (p<.001), the CD4+ (p = .003) and CD8+ (p = .005) T-cell subsets and for annexin V binding in CD4+ T cells (p = .005). When patients with CD4 counts <200 cells/microl were analyzed separately, only annexin V binding in CD4+ T cells, but none of the other prognostic markers could predict complications (p = .001). CONCLUSION: Determination of annexin V binding on CD4+ T cells may be a useful tool to monitor HIV-infected patients with low (<200 cells/microl) CD4 counts, as it can reliably assess the risk for imminent complications in such patients.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to compare accepted surrogate markers of HIV disease progression with markers of lymphocyte apoptosis in their ability to predict short-term disease progression. METHODS: In all, 40 HIV-positive patients were studied prospectively and observed during follow-up for HIV-related adverse clinical events. Ex vivo apoptosis was measured with the markers CD95 expression, annexin V binding, and Apostain dye uptake by flow cytometry at baseline. Established markers of disease progression (CD4 count, HIV-RNA level, and CD8/38 count), CD8, B-cell, and natural killer (NK) cell counts were determined by standard procedures at baseline and after 6 months. RESULTS: In HIV-infectedpatients, CD95 expression and annexin V binding showed significantly elevated apoptosis in peripheral blood lymphocytes and all lymphocyte subsets at baseline compared with HIV-negative, healthy controls. Apostain failed to differentiate between HIV-infectedpatients and healthy controls. HIV-related complications could be predicted by CD4 and CD8/38 counts, but not HIV viral load as assessed by relative operating characteristic (ROC) analysis (CD4, p = .003; CD8/38, p = .031). A similar or even better diagnostic accuracy was found for CD95 expression in total lymphocytes (p<.001), the CD4+ (p = .003) and CD8+ (p = .005) T-cell subsets and for annexin V binding in CD4+ T cells (p = .005). When patients with CD4 counts <200 cells/microl were analyzed separately, only annexin V binding in CD4+ T cells, but none of the other prognostic markers could predict complications (p = .001). CONCLUSION: Determination of annexin V binding on CD4+ T cells may be a useful tool to monitor HIV-infectedpatients with low (<200 cells/microl) CD4 counts, as it can reliably assess the risk for imminent complications in such patients.
Authors: Julian J Lum; Oren J Cohen; Zilin Nie; Joel G Weaver; Timothy S Gomez; Xiao-Jian Yao; David Lynch; André A Pilon; Nanci Hawley; John E Kim; Zhaoxia Chen; Michael Montpetit; Jaime Sanchez-Dardon; Eric A Cohen; Andrew D Badley Journal: J Clin Invest Date: 2003-05 Impact factor: 14.808
Authors: Stephanie M Dillon; Laura J Friedlander; Lisa M Rogers; Amie L Meditz; Joy M Folkvord; Elizabeth Connick; Martin D McCarter; Cara C Wilson Journal: J Virol Date: 2010-10-20 Impact factor: 5.103
Authors: Jérôme Estaquier; Jean-Daniel Lelièvre; Frédéric Petit; Thomas Brunner; Laure Moutouh-De Parseval; Douglas D Richman; Jean Claude Ameisen; Jacques Corbeil Journal: J Virol Date: 2002-06 Impact factor: 5.103
Authors: Suvercha Bhardwaj; Fareed Ahmad; Heiner Wedemeyer; Marcus Cornberg; Julian Schulze Zur Wiesch; Jan van Lunzen; Shiv K Sarin; Reinhold E Schmidt; Dirk Meyer-Olson Journal: Virol J Date: 2016-04-18 Impact factor: 4.099