| Is 
HIV Becoming More Virulent? By 
Liz Highleyman The 
advent of effective combination 
antiretroviral therapy has dramatically improved the prognosis for people 
with HIV, but at the same time, the virus may be evolving to be more aggressive, 
according to an analysis presented this week at the 48th 
International Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) 
in Washington, DC. One 
indicator of HIV virulence is how rapidly it kills CD4 T-cells. Nancy Crum-Cianflone 
and colleagues from the Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program at Uniformed 
Services University of the Health Sciences sought to determine whether initial 
post-seroconversion CD4 counts have changed over the course of the epidemic.
 The 
investigators evaluated 1944 racially diverse HIV seroconverters who received 
care at 7 military HIV clinics across the U.S. from 1985 through 2004. Participants 
were treatment-naive, had documented HIV negative and positive dates (an average 
of 18 months apart), and had a CD4 count measurement within 6 months of their 
HIV diagnosis. Most (96%) were men, about half were white, about 40% were black, 
and the mean age was about 29 years (increasing over the study period).
 
 Linear 
regression was used to assess trends in initial CD4 cell count across calendar 
periods, adjusted for patient age, sex, race/ethnicity, enrollment site, length 
of seroconverting window, time from HIV positive test to CD4 cell measurement, 
and HIV viral load when available (n = 990).
 Results  
 
     The average post-seroconversion CD4 count 
decreased by 133 cells/mm3 over the course of the HIV epidemic: 
  
     632 cells/mm3 for 1985-1990; 
     555 cells/mm3 for 1991-1995;
  
     495 cells/mm3 for 1996-2001;
  
     499 cells/mm3 for 2002-2004.
  
 
     CD4 count was < 350 cells/mm3 -- the 
current threshold for starting antiretroviral therapy -- in 12% of patients who 
seroconverted in 1985-1990 compared to 25% who did so in 2002-2004 (P < 0.0001). 
  
     After adjusting for all covariates, seroconverters 
during 2002-2004 had post-seroconversion CD4 counts 113 cells/mm3 lower than seroconverters 
during 1985-1990 (P < 0.001).
 
  
     Patients who seroconverted during 1991-1995 
and 1996-2001 also had CD4 cell counts significantly lower than those who did 
so during 1985-1990 (P < 0.0001).
 
  
     There was no significant difference, however, 
between CD4 counts of people who seroconverted during 1996-2001 compared with 
2002-2004.
 
  
     Higher CD4 count correlated with younger 
age, white race/ethnicity, lower initial HIV viral load, and shorter seroconverting 
window.
 
  
     Similar decreasing trends in CD4 percentage 
and total lymphocyte count were also observed, but not in CD8 T-cell count or 
white blood cell count.
 Based 
on these findings, the researchers concluded, "A significant decline in initial 
CD4 counts among seroconverters occurred during the first decade of the epidemic, 
with stabilization since the mid-1990s." "These 
data provide an important clinical correlate to studies suggesting that HIV may 
have adapted to the host, by HLA adaptation or [cytotoxic T-lymphocyte] escape, 
resulting in a more virulent infection," they continued.
 "The 
AIDS virus may have learned how to evade early detection from the body's own defenses," 
Dr. Crum-Cianflone explained in an ICAAC media release. "This means that 
when a person contracts the AIDS virus, the virus may begin to spread and severely 
weaken the body (by destroying vital immune "CD4" cells) before the 
body even has a chance to try to respond."
 
 TriService AIDS Clinical 
Consortium/Infectious Disease Clinical Res. Program, Bethesda, MD.
 
 10/31/08
 
 Reference
 NF 
Crum-Cianflone, l Eberly, Y Zhang, and others. Is HIV Becoming More Virulent? 
Initial CD4 Cell Counts among HIV Seroconverters Across the HIV Epidemic: 1985-2007. 
48th International Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 
2008). Washington, DC. October 25-28, 2008. Abstract H-4051.
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