aNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) bBiostatistics Research Branch, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda cScience Applications International Corporation-Frederick, Frederick National Laboratory, Frederick dClinical Dental Research Core, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
AIDS. 2014 Jan 2;28(1):31-9. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000006.
Immune restoration disease (IRD) can develop in HIV-infected patients following antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation as unmasking or paradoxical worsening of opportunistic infections and, rarely, autoimmune phenomena. Although IRD usually occurs in the first months of ART during memory CD4 T-cell recovery, Graves' disease occurs as a distinctive late-onset IRD and its pathogenesis is unclear.
Seven patients who developed Graves' disease following ART initiation from the primary HIV care clinic at the National Institutes of Health were retrospectively identified and each was matched with two HIV-infected controls based on age, sex, and baseline CD4 T-cell count. Laboratory evaluations on stored cryopreserved samples were performed.
Immunophenotyping of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), T-cell receptor excision circle (TREC) analysis in PBMCs, measurement of serum cytokines, and luciferase immunoprecipitation systems (LIPS) analysis for autoimmune antibodies were performed on stored samples for cases and controls at baseline and longitudinally following ART initiation. TSH/thyrotropin receptor (TSH-R) antibody testing was performed on serum from cases. Data were analyzed using nonparametric testing.
In comparison with controls, the proportion of naive CD4 T cells increased significantly (P = 0.0027) in the Graves' disease-IRD patients. TREC/10 PBMCs also increased significantly following ART in Graves' disease-IRD patients compared with controls (P = 0.0071). Similarly, LIPS analysis demonstrated increases in nonthyroid-related autoantibody titers over time following ART in cases compared with controls.
Our data suggest that Graves' disease-IRD, in contrast to early-onset IRD, is associated with naive and primary thymic emigrant CD4 T-cell recovery and inappropriate autoantibody production.
在开始抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)后,HIV 感染患者可能会出现免疫重建疾病(IRD),表现为机会性感染的显现或矛盾恶化,极少数情况下还会出现自身免疫现象。虽然 IRD 通常发生在 ART 治疗的头几个月,此时记忆性 CD4 T 细胞正在恢复,但格雷夫斯病是一种独特的迟发性 IRD,其发病机制尚不清楚。
从美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)的主要 HIV 护理诊所回顾性确定了 7 名在开始 ART 后出现格雷夫斯病的患者,并根据年龄、性别和基线 CD4 T 细胞计数与 2 名 HIV 感染对照相匹配。对储存的冷冻样本进行了实验室评估。
对储存的样本进行了外周血单核细胞(PBMC)免疫表型分析、PBMC 中的 T 细胞受体切除环(TREC)分析、血清细胞因子测量以及用于自身抗体的荧光素酶免疫沉淀系统(LIPS)分析,对病例和对照进行了基线和 ART 开始后纵向评估。对病例的血清进行了促甲状腺素/促甲状腺素受体(TSH-R)抗体检测。使用非参数检验进行数据分析。
与对照组相比,格雷夫斯病-IRD 患者的幼稚 CD4 T 细胞比例显著增加(P=0.0027)。与对照组相比,格雷夫斯病-IRD 患者在 ART 后 TREC/10 PBMC 也显著增加(P=0.0071)。同样,LIPS 分析表明,与对照组相比,病例在 ART 后随着时间的推移,非甲状腺相关自身抗体滴度增加。
我们的数据表明,与早期 IRD 相反,格雷夫斯病-IRD 与幼稚和初始胸腺迁出 CD4 T 细胞恢复以及不适当的自身抗体产生有关。