Host and viral genetic correlates of clinical definitions of HIV-1 disease progression.

Details

Ressource 1Download: BIB_D1E04B8B1CBB.P001.pdf (511.93 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: author
Serval ID
serval:BIB_D1E04B8B1CBB
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Host and viral genetic correlates of clinical definitions of HIV-1 disease progression.
Journal
PloS One
Author(s)
Casado Concepcion, Colombo Sara, Rauch Andri, Martinez Raquel, Guenthard Huldrych F., Garcia Soledad, Rodriguez Carmen, del Romero Jorge, Telenti Amalio, Lopez-Galindez Cecilio
ISSN
1932-6203[electronic], 1932-6203[linking]
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2010
Volume
5
Number
6
Pages
11079
Language
english
Abstract
Background:
Various patterns of HIV-1 disease progression are described in clinical practice and in research. There is a need to assess the specificity of commonly used definitions of long term non-progressor (LTNP) elite controllers (LTNP-EC), viremic controllers (LTNP-VC), and viremic non controllers (LTNP-NC), as well as of chronic progressors (P) and rapid progressors (RP).
Methodology and Principal Findings:
We re-evaluated the HIV-1 clinical definitions, summarized in Table 1, using the information provided by a selected number of host genetic markers and viral factors. There is a continuous decrease of protective factors and an accumulation of risk factors from LTNP-EC to RP. Statistical differences in frequency of protective HLA-B alleles (p-0.01), HLA-C rs9264942 (p-0.06), and protective CCR5/CCR2 haplotypes (p-0.02) across groups, and the presence of viruses with an ancestral genotype in the "viral dating" (i.e., nucleotide sequences with low viral divergence from the most recent common ancestor) support the differences among principal clinical groups of HIV-1 infected individuals.
Conclusions:
A combination of host genetic and viral factors supports current clinical definitions that discriminate among patterns of HIV-1 progression. The study also emphasizes the need to apply a standardized and accepted set of clinical definitions for the purpose of disease stratification and research.
Keywords
Human-Immunodeficiency-Virus, Long-Term Nonprogressors, Treatment Interruptions, Antiretroviral Therapy, Replication Capacity, Type-1 Infection, Evolution, Heterogeneity, Controllers, Contribute
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
30/06/2010 9:16
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:52
Usage data