Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Emory University Rollins School of Public Health and School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.
Clin Infect Dis. 2020 Apr 15;70(9):1845-1854. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciz560.
Immune restoration on antiretroviral therapy (ART) can drive inflammation in people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who have pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), but its effects on the lungs have not been assessed. We evaluated associations between pulmonary inflammation, recovery of pathogen-specific CD4 T-cell function, and lung injury prior to and after ART initiation in adults with HIV and pulmonary TB.
This was a prospective cohort study in South Africa, following adults with HIV and pulmonary TB prior to and up to 48 weeks after ART initiation. Pulmonary-specific inflammation was defined as total glycolytic activity (TGA) on [18]F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) at baseline and 4 weeks after ART initiation. Spirometry, respiratory symptom tests, and flow cytometry were performed at the same times to assess lung involvement and the frequency of mycobacteria-specific CD4 T-cells. In addition, we evaluated lung function longitudinally up to 48 weeks after ART initiation.
Greater lung TGA on FDG PET-CT was associated with worse lung function and respiratory symptoms prior to ART initiation, and nearly half of subjects experienced worsening lung inflammation and lung function at Week 4 of ART. Worsening Week 4 lung inflammation and pulmonary function were both associated with greater increases in pathogen-specific functional CD4 T-cell responses on ART, and early decreases in lung function were independently associated with persistently lower lung function months after TB treatment completion.
Increases in pulmonary inflammation and decreases in lung function are common on ART, relate to greater ART-mediated CD4 T-cell restoration, and are associated with the persistent impairment of lung function in individuals with HIV/TB.
抗逆转录病毒疗法 (ART) 可恢复人体免疫缺陷病毒 (HIV) 感染者的免疫功能,从而引发肺结核 (TB) 患者的炎症反应,但尚未评估其对肺部的影响。我们评估了 HIV 和肺结核患者在开始 ART 前后肺部炎症、病原体特异性 CD4 T 细胞功能恢复和肺损伤之间的关系。
这是一项南非的前瞻性队列研究,在开始 ART 之前和之后的 48 周内对 HIV 和肺结核患者进行随访。在基线和 ART 开始后 4 周,通过 [18]F-氟脱氧葡萄糖 (FDG) 正电子发射断层扫描 - 计算机断层扫描 (PET-CT) 测定肺部特定的炎症程度,即总糖酵解活性 (TGA)。在相同时间进行肺功能检查、呼吸症状测试和流式细胞术,以评估肺部受累情况和分枝杆菌特异性 CD4 T 细胞的频率。此外,我们还对开始 ART 后 48 周内的肺功能进行了纵向评估。
在开始 ART 之前,FDG PET-CT 上的肺部 TGA 越大,肺功能和呼吸症状越差,近一半的患者在 ART 开始后的第 4 周出现肺部炎症和肺功能恶化。第 4 周肺部炎症恶化和肺功能恶化都与更大的病原体特异性功能性 CD4 T 细胞反应相关,早期肺功能下降与 TB 治疗完成后数月肺功能持续下降独立相关。
在开始 ART 后,肺部炎症增加和肺功能下降很常见,与更大的 ART 介导的 CD4 T 细胞恢复相关,并与 HIV/TB 患者肺功能持续受损相关。