Combined ART started during acute HIV infection protects central memory CD4+ T cells and can induce remission

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Cheret, Antoine | Bacchus-Souffan, Charline | Avettand-Fenoël, Véronique | Mélard, Adeline | Nembot, Georges | Blanc, Catherine | Samri, Assia | Saez-Cirion, Asier | Hocqueloux, Laurent | Lascoux-Combe, Caroline | Allavena, Clotilde | Goujard, Cécile | Valantin, Marc Antoine | Leplatois, Anne | Meyer, Laurence | Rouzioux, Christine | Autran, Brigitte | Group, Optiprim Anrs-147 Study

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press (OUP) -

International audience. BACKGROUND: Therapeutic control of HIV replication reduces the size of the viral reservoir, particularly among central memory CD4+ T cells, and this effect might be accentuated by early treatment. METHODS: We examined the effect of ART initiated at the time of the primary HIV infection (early ART), lasting 2 and 6 years in 11 and 10 patients, respectively, on the HIV reservoir in peripheral resting CD4+ T cells, sorted into naive (TN), central memory (TCM), transitional memory (TTM) and effector memory (TEM) cells, by comparison with 11 post-treatment controllers (PTCs). RESULTS: Between baseline and 2 years, CD4+ T cell subset numbers increased markedly (P \textless 0.004) and HIV DNA levels decreased in all subsets (P \textless 0.009). TTM cells represented the majority of reservoir cells at both timepoints, T cell activation status normalized and viral diversity remained stable over time. The HIV reservoir was smaller after 6 years of early ART than after 2 years (P \textless 0.019), and did not differ between PTCs and patients treated for 6 years. One patient, who had low reservoir levels in all T cell subsets after 2 years of treatment similar to the levels in PTCs, spontaneously controlled viral replication during 18 months off treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Early prolonged ART thus limits the size of the HIV reservoir, protects long-lived cells from persistent infection and may enhance post-treatment control.

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