PLoS Pathogens (May 2014)

HIV-infected individuals with low CD4/CD8 ratio despite effective antiretroviral therapy exhibit altered T cell subsets, heightened CD8+ T cell activation, and increased risk of non-AIDS morbidity and mortality.

  • Sergio Serrano-Villar,
  • Talia Sainz,
  • Sulggi A Lee,
  • Peter W Hunt,
  • Elizabeth Sinclair,
  • Barbara L Shacklett,
  • April L Ferre,
  • Timothy L Hayes,
  • Ma Somsouk,
  • Priscilla Y Hsue,
  • Mark L Van Natta,
  • Curtis L Meinert,
  • Michael M Lederman,
  • Hiroyu Hatano,
  • Vivek Jain,
  • Yong Huang,
  • Frederick M Hecht,
  • Jeffrey N Martin,
  • Joseph M McCune,
  • Santiago Moreno,
  • Steven G Deeks

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. e1004078

Abstract

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A low CD4/CD8 ratio in elderly HIV-uninfected adults is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. A subset of HIV-infected adults receiving effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) fails to normalize this ratio, even after they achieve normal CD4+ T cell counts. The immunologic and clinical characteristics of this clinical phenotype remain undefined. Using data from four distinct clinical cohorts and three clinical trials, we show that a low CD4/CD8 ratio in HIV-infected adults during otherwise effective ART (after CD4 count recovery above 500 cells/mm3) is associated with a number of immunological abnormalities, including a skewed T cell phenotype from naïve toward terminally differentiated CD8+ T cells, higher levels of CD8+ T cell activation (HLADR+CD38+) and senescence (CD28- and CD57+CD28-), and higher kynurenine/tryptophan ratio. Changes in the peripheral CD4/CD8 ratio are also reflective of changes in gut mucosa, but not in lymph nodes. In a longitudinal study, individuals who initiated ART within six months of infection had greater CD4/CD8 ratio increase compared to later initiators (>2 years). After controlling for age, gender, ART duration, nadir and CD4 count, the CD4/CD8 ratio predicted increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Hence, a persistently low CD4/CD8 ratio during otherwise effective ART is associated with increased innate and adaptive immune activation, an immunosenescent phenotype, and higher risk of morbidity/mortality. This ratio may prove useful in monitoring response to ART and could identify a unique subset of individuals needed of novel therapeutic interventions.