Objective: To ascertain whether lymphoproliferation (LP) responses to HIVp24 in chronically infected patients treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART) predict an improved cytolytic T-cell phenotype or better in vivo immune function as measured by immunization responses.
Methods: HIV-infected patients who started ART during chronic infection and who achieved viral suppression (HIV-RNA < 400 copies/ml for > 12 months) were grouped by the presence of strong [stimulation index (SI) > 10; n = 21] or absent (SI < 3; n = 18) LP to HIV-core antigen. The two groups were compared for functional immune responses to vaccination with diphtheria-toxoid, tetanus-toxoid and keyhole-limpet-hemocyanin, frequency of circulating naive and memory CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes, maturation phenotype and expression of cytolytic molecules on total and HIV-specific CD8+ T cells, and frequency of memory CD4+ T cells with intracellular HIV-mRNA. Group comparisons were analyzed by non-parametric Mann-Whitney tests. Proportions were estimated by Pearson's chi analysis.
Results: There were no differences between the groups in immune responses to vaccination or in the numbers or phenotype of circulating T cells. In a subgroup of HLA-A2+ or B8+ patients, HIV-reactive CD8+ T cells in both groups had similar expression of perforin, granzyme A and T-cell maturation markers (CD27, CD28, CCR7, CD62L). However, patients with SI > 10 in response to HIVp24 tended to more often have high levels of circulating CD4+ T cells with intracellular HIV-1 mRNA than did patients with SI < 3.
Conclusion: Following long-standing suppression of viral replication on ART, the presence of HIV-1 specific T-helper proliferation responses does not correlate with improved indices of immune phenotype or function but may reflect relatively higher levels of HIV-expression.