Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) treatment for modulation of immune activation in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infected therapy-naive individuals

Publication date

2007

Authors

Vermeulen, J.N.
Prins, J.M.
Bunnik, E.
Hack, C.E.
Jurriaans, S.
Miedema, FISNI 0000000066461142
Lange, J.M.
Schuitemaker, H.

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Article

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Abstract

We evaluated the ability of intravenous immunoglobuline (IVIG) to diminish immune hyperactivation, which is considered a major cause of CD4+ T cell loss during chronic HIV-1 infection and whether this affected CD4+ T cell counts and plasma HIV-1 RNA (pVL). Therefore, we treated six chronically HIV-1-infected, antiretroviral-therapy-naive patients with IVIG (0.4 g/kg) at weeks 0 and 4, with a follow-up of 12 weeks after the second dosage during which pVL, T cell numbers, and T cell activation were measured. At baseline median CD4+ T cell counts were 300 (range 200–460) × 106/liter and median pVL was 5.0 (range 3.2–5.2) log10copies/ml. IgG plasma levels peaked during the first days after administration. We observed a decrease in the percentage of activated (CD38+ HLA-DR+) CD4+ and CD8+ T cells [3.5% (range 1–7%) and 5% (1–10%), respectively (p = 0.027)], but no effect on the fraction of proliferating CD4+ or CD8+ T cells as measured by Ki67 expression. CD4+ T cell counts were significantly increased on day 4 (median +55 cells, range 0–150, p = 0.043). pVL was significantly increased on day 1 after IVIG infusion (median +0.13 log10, range 0.01–0.55, p = 0.028). All these parameters returned to baseline levels within 1 week after infusion. In conclusion, administration of IVIG caused a temporary decrease in T cell activation and an increase in CD4+ T cell counts, despite an increase in pVL. Our results support the hypothesis that T cell activation, rather than direct HIV-1 infection, mediates the loss of CD4+ T cells and suggest that immunomodulating therapy in HIV-1 infection could indeed be effective.

Keywords

Taverne

Citation

Vermeulen, J N, Prins, J M, Bunnik, E, Hack, C E, Jurriaans, S, Miedema, F, Lange, J M & Schuitemaker, H 2007, 'Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) treatment for modulation of immune activation in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infected therapy-naive individuals', AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, vol. 23, no. 11, pp. 1348-1353. https://doi.org/10.1089/aid.2006.0210