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Persistently high IgA serum levels are a marker of immunological or virological failure of combined antiretroviral therapy in children with perinatal HIV-1 infection
- Publication Year :
- 2005
-
Abstract
- Summary Non-expensive and low-complexity surrogate markers for monitoring the response to combined antiretroviral therapy (combined-ART) are needed in poor-resource settings where routine assessment of CD4+ T-lymphocyte count and viral load can not be afforded. We longitudinally evaluated Ig serum levels in 234 HIV-1 infected children receiving combined-ART with ≥ 3 drugs. Since Ig levels physiologically vary with age, differences at different age periods were evaluated as differences in z-scores calculated using the mean and standard deviation of the normal population for each age period. Data from 17 (7·3%) children with immunological failure and from 54 (23·1%) children with virological failure of combined-ART were compared with data from not-failed children. At baseline children with immunological failure showed higher IgM z-scores (P = 0·042) than children without. After 3–12 months of therapy immunologically failed children displayed higher viral loads (P < 0·0001) and IgA (P = 0·043) z-scores than not-failed children. Similarly, at the same follow-up time, children with virological failure showed lower CD4+ T-lymphocyte percentages (P = 0·005) and higher IgA z-scores (P < 0·0001) than not-failed children. No difference in IgG or IgM z-scores was evidenced between failed and not-failed children after 3–12 months of therapy. In conclusion, IgA serum level is a cheap and low-complexity marker of immunological or virological failure of combined-ART which might be adopted in poor-resource settings.
- Subjects :
- Adolescent
Anti-HIV Agents
Immunology
HIV Infections
HIV-1 infection
Perinatal hiv
Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active
Clinical Studies
Immunology and Allergy
Medicine
Humans
Treatment Failure
Child
viremia
business.industry
combinedantiretroviral therapy
hyper-IgA
Infant, Newborn
Normal population
Infant
Viral Load
Antiretroviral therapy
Virological failure
Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical
CD4 Lymphocyte Count
Immunoglobulin A
Child, Preschool
HIV-1
Drug Monitoring
business
Viral load
Biomarkers
Follow-Up Studies
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....87ab535eebb4f3886527e9bf13edb943