| Literature DB >> 9815238 |
D L Mann1, R P Garner, D E Dayhoff, K Cao, M A Fernández-Viña, C Davis, N Aronson, N Ruiz, D L Birx, N L Michael.
Abstract
To assess the influence of HLA on AIDS-free survival, human immunodeficiency virus load, and CD4 cell counts, 91 Caucasian and 48 African-American seroprevalent men were typed for HLA classes I and II and TAP alleles. HLA associations with these markers were assessed by assigning sum integer scores based on 7 class I allele-TAP variants (+1) and 13 class I-class II-TAP combinations (-1) with different AIDS-free survival times found in a prior study. Subjects in both racial groups and combined with positive sum scores were less likely to have CD4 cell decline (P=.0004), to have increased virus burden (P=.014), and to develop AIDS (P=.034) in the follow-up period than were Caucasians and African Americans with scores of 0 or -1. These results confirm the reported associations of specific major histocompatibility complex genes with AIDS-free survival time in Caucasians and specifically extend them to African Americans and to two established markers of disease progression.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9815238 DOI: 10.1086/314519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226