PLoS ONE (Oct 2010)

Effects of maraviroc and efavirenz on markers of immune activation and inflammation and associations with CD4+ cell rises in HIV-infected patients.

  • Nicholas Funderburg,
  • Magdalena Kalinowska,
  • James Eason,
  • James Goodrich,
  • Jayvant Heera,
  • Howard Mayer,
  • Natasa Rajicic,
  • Hernan Valdez,
  • Michael M Lederman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013188
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 10
p. e13188

Abstract

Read online

Maraviroc treatment for HIV-1 infected patients results in larger CD4(+) T cell rises than are attributable to its antiviral activity alone. We investigated whether this is due to modulation of T cell activation and inflammation.Thirty maraviroc-treated patients from the Maraviroc versus Efavirenz Regimens as Initial Therapy (MERIT) study were randomly selected from among those who had CCR5-tropic (R5) HIV on screening and achieved undetectable HIV RNA (2 µg/mL increased from 45% to 66% in the efavirenz arm, but remained constant in the maraviroc arm (P = 0.033). Decreases in CD38 expression on CD8(+) T cells were correlated with CD4(+) T cell rises for maraviroc treatment (r = -0.4, P = 0.048), but not for treatment with efavirenz.Maraviroc-treated patients had earlier, modest decreases in certain markers of immune activation and inflammation, although in this small study, many of the differences were not statistically significant. Levels of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein remained constant in the maraviroc arm and increased in the efavirenz arm. Decreases in immune activation correlated with increased CD4(+) T cell gains.ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00098293.