Immunologic and virologic evaluation after influenza vaccination of HIV-1-infected patients

1997 
Objective: The present study was designed to determine the effect of immune activation, achieved by influenza vaccination, on plasma HIV RNA levels and immunological parameters including CD4 cell levels, antigen-stimulated T-cell function and apoptotic death of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Design and methods: Thirty-four HIV-infected individuals and nine uninfected controls were immunized with influenza vaccine and blood was collected at weeks 0, 2, 4 and 16. Plasma was isolated and used for HIV RNA and influenza-specific antibody quantifications. CD4 cell counts, activation and maturation markers of T-lymphocyte subsets were determined by flow cytometry. In vitro T-helper responses, spontaneous- and activation-induced cell death assays were also performed. Results: Influenza-specific humoral and cellular immune responses correlated with CD4 count. Only in patients with CD4 counts > 300 x 10 6 /l there was a modest increase in T-cell responses to influenza virus, which was less than control subjects, observed after vaccination. Immunization had no significant effect on CD4 counts or plasma viral levels in the HIV-positive patients. Baseline apoptosis inversely correlated with CD4 counts and directly correlated with viral load. Activation-induced apoptosis did not change appreciably after vaccination and spontaneous apoptosis increased only in the 300 and < 300 CD4 groups, respectively.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    106
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []