Abstract
BACKGROUND: As part of the Houston Vanguard study, a subset of 10 patients randomized to receive IL-2 therapy were compared to 4 patients randomized to not receive IL-2, for markers of T cell activation and death during the first three cycles of IL-2. All patients were treated with combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) and were virally suppressed. The purpose of the study was to examine the role of CD8(+) T cell death in responses to ART and IL-2 therapy. METHODS: Lymphocytes were examined at Day 0, 5 and 30 days during three cycles of IL-2 therapy. CD25, CD38, HLA-DR expression and annexin (cell death) were examined on CD4 and CD8 subpopulations. Follow up studies examined CD4 levels and CD4:CD8 reconstitution after 6 years using both univariant and multivariate analyses. RESULTS: Human lymphocytes responded to IL-2 therapy by upregulation of CD25 on CD4(+) T cells, leading to an increase in CD4 cell counts. CD8(+) T cells did not increase CD25 expression, but upregulated activation antigens (CD38 and DR) and had increased death. At baseline, 7 of the 14 patients had high CD8+ T cell apoptosis (mean 17.0% +/- 6.0). We did an exploratory analysis of immune status after six years, and found that baseline CD8+ T cell apoptosis was correlated with CD4 cell count gain beginning two years post enrollment. Patients with low levels of CD8(+) T cell apoptosis at baseline (mean 2.2% +/- 2.1) had significantly higher CD4 cell counts and more normalized CD4:CD8 ratios than patients with high CD8(+) T cell apoptosis (mean CD4 cell counts 1,209 +/- 164 vs 754 +/- 320 cells/mm(3); CD4:CD8 ratios 1.55 vs. 0.70, respectively). CONCLUSION: We postulate that CD8(+) T cell apoptosis may reflect inherent activation status, which continues in some patients even though viral replication is suppressed which influences the ability of CD4(+) T cells to rebound. Levels of CD8(+) T cell apoptosis may therefore be an independent predictor of immune status, which should be shown in a prospective study.