Hsieh Anthony Y Y, Cai Renying, Bernard Nicole F, Tremblay Cécile L, Côté Hélène C F
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Centre for Blood Research, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Centre for Blood Research, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; Edwin S.H. Leong Healthy Aging Program, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia.
J Infect. 2025 Jul;91(1):106511. doi: 10.1016/j.jinf.2025.106511. Epub 2025 May 19.
Uncontrolled HIV viremia results in the progression to AIDS, however, this can be stopped with antiretroviral therapy (ART). Slow progressors are rare individuals who can prevent or delay HIV disease progression without ART. It is unknown whether they experience immune aging akin to normal progressors on ART.
We investigated persons living with HIV (PWH) who were either HIV slow progressors (n = 58), PWH on ART with undetectable HIV viremia (n = 58), or PWH not on ART with detectable viremia (n = 26), and 56 controls without HIV. The groups were well matched for age and sex. A panel of T-cell differentiation and immune aging markers was measured, along with T and B cell subset telomere length, adjusting for major confounders.
Relative to the ART-suppressed HIV group, slow progressors showed immune aging markers indicative of more advanced aging, including lower CD8 naïve:effector memory ratio (standardized effect size -0.41 [95% CI -0.74, -0.07]), and shorter telomere length in B cells (-0.52 [-0.97, -0.07]), CD4 T cells (-0.58 [-0.94, -0.23]), and proliferative CD8 cells (-0.41 [-0.80, -0.01]). Comparison of slow progressors with the control group without HIV showed the same effects. Further, within the slow progressor group, immune aging patterns for the subgroup of elite controllers were not different.
Our findings indicate that despite natural host control of HIV replication, slow progressors show evidence of disproportionately advanced immune aging. This reinforces the potential benefit of ART and emphasizes the need to both diagnose slow progressors and study their potential age-related comorbidities.
未得到控制的HIV病毒血症会导致病情进展至艾滋病,然而,抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)可阻止这种情况发生。缓慢进展者是罕见的个体,他们在未接受ART的情况下能够预防或延缓HIV疾病进展。尚不清楚他们是否会经历与接受ART的正常进展者类似的免疫衰老。
我们研究了以下几类人群:HIV缓慢进展者(n = 58)、接受ART且HIV病毒血症检测不到的HIV感染者(n = 58)、未接受ART且病毒血症可检测到的HIV感染者(n = 26),以及56名未感染HIV的对照组。这些组在年龄和性别方面匹配良好。检测了一组T细胞分化和免疫衰老标志物,以及T细胞和B细胞亚群的端粒长度,并对主要混杂因素进行了校正。
相对于ART抑制的HIV组,缓慢进展者表现出指示更高级衰老的免疫衰老标志物,包括较低的CD8初始型:效应记忆细胞比例(标准化效应大小-0.41 [95%置信区间-0.74,-0.07]),以及B细胞(-0.52 [-0.97,-0.07])、CD4 T细胞(-0.58 [-0.94,-0.23])和增殖性CD8细胞(-0.41 [-0.80,-0.01])中较短的端粒长度。缓慢进展者与未感染HIV的对照组比较显示出相同的效应。此外,在缓慢进展者组内,精英控制者亚组的免疫衰老模式没有差异。
我们的数据表明,尽管宿主对HIV复制有自然控制,但缓慢进展者显示出免疫衰老程度不成比例地提前的证据。这强化了ART的潜在益处,并强调需要诊断缓慢进展者并研究他们潜在的与年龄相关的合并症。