Vanpouille Christophe, Wells Alan, DeGruttola Victor, Lynch Miranda, Zhang Xinlian, Fitzgerald Wendy, Tu Xin, Chaillon Antoine, Landay Alan, Weber Kathleen, Scully Eileen, Karn Jonathan, Gianella Sara
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.
AIDS. 2025 Jan 1;39(1):1-10. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000004033. Epub 2024 Oct 10.
Although antiretroviral therapy (ART) suppresses viral replication and reduces inflammation, it does not lead to the normalization of cytokines. The long-term effects of ART beyond viral suppression have not been studied and are mostly limited to cross-sectional research.
The impact of long-term ART on the trajectory of 40 cytokines/chemokines in 31 men and 59 women who maintained viral suppression over a median period of 6 years (317 visits ranging from 24 to 384 weeks post ART initiation) were measured by Luminex.
We used a generalized additive model with a Gaussian distribution and identity link function to model concentrations over time and investigate sex and race differences.
While most cytokine/chemokine trajectories remained stable, the trajectory of nine markers of monocyte/macrophage activation (IP-10, I-TAC, MIG, sCD163, sCD14, MCP-1, MIP-3β, CXCL13, TNF-α) decreased over time (adj. P < 0.05). Despite continuous viral suppression, M-CSF, IL-15, and LBP increased over time (adj. P < 0.05). sCD14 was the only cytokine whose trajectory differed by sex (adj. P = 0.033). Overall, women had lower mean levels of IL-18 but higher levels of sCD14 than did men (adj. P < 0.05). GROα, LBP, and sCD14 showed significant differences between races (adj. P < 0.05). No association between cytokines and cellular HIV DNA/RNA was found.
Our study reveals a continuous decline in markers of monocyte/macrophage activation over 6 years of suppressive ART, indicating that long-term treatment may mitigate inflammaging and cardiovascular-related outcomes. The higher levels of sCD14 observed in women are consistent with them having greater innate immune activation than men do.
尽管抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)可抑制病毒复制并减轻炎症,但它并不能使细胞因子恢复正常。ART在病毒抑制之外的长期影响尚未得到研究,且大多局限于横断面研究。
通过Luminex检测了31名男性和59名女性在6年中位期内维持病毒抑制状态(ART开始后24至384周进行了317次访视)期间,长期ART对40种细胞因子/趋化因子轨迹的影响。
我们使用具有高斯分布和恒等连接函数的广义相加模型来模拟随时间变化的浓度,并研究性别和种族差异。
虽然大多数细胞因子/趋化因子轨迹保持稳定,但单核细胞/巨噬细胞激活的9种标志物(IP-10、I-TAC、MIG、sCD163、sCD14、MCP-1、MIP-3β、CXCL13、TNF-α)的轨迹随时间下降(校正P<0.05)。尽管病毒持续受到抑制,但M-CSF、IL-15和LBP随时间升高(校正P<0.05)。sCD14是唯一轨迹存在性别差异的细胞因子(校正P = 0.033)。总体而言,女性的IL-18平均水平低于男性,但sCD14水平高于男性(校正P<0.05)。GROα、LBP和sCD14在种族之间存在显著差异(校正P<0.05)。未发现细胞因子与细胞内HIV DNA/RNA之间存在关联。
我们的研究揭示了在6年的抑制性ART治疗期间,单核细胞/巨噬细胞激活标志物持续下降,表明长期治疗可能减轻炎症衰老和心血管相关结局。女性中观察到的较高sCD14水平与她们比男性具有更强的固有免疫激活相一致。