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AuthorCelerino da Silva, Ronaldo
AuthorAlves, Neyla M. Pereira
AuthorGondim Silva, Maria L.
AuthorAgrelli, Almerinda
AuthorCoelho, Antonio V. Campos
AuthorGuimarães, Rafael L.
AuthorArraes, Luiz C.
AuthorCrovella, Sergio
AuthorBrandão, Lucas A. Cavalcanti
Available date2022-02-27T05:38:25Z
Publication Date2021
Publication NameJournal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes (1999)
ResourceScopus
ISSN1525-4135
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAI.0000000000002761
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/27408
AbstractBackground: Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is an important hallmark of HIV-1 treatment, enabling viral load suppression to undetectable levels and CD4+ T-cell recovery. However, some individuals do not recover the CD4+ T-cell count to normal levels, despite viral suppression. We hypothesize that variation in genes involved in extrinsic apoptosis pathways may influence interindividual immune recovery during ART. Methods: We assessed clinical-epidemiological variables and the allelic/genotypic distribution of functional single nucleotide polymorphisms in genes involved in extrinsic apoptosis pathways (TNFRSF1A: rs1800692 and rs767455; TNFAIP3: rs2270926; NFKBIA: rs8904; and TNF-α: rs1800629) and their relationship with immune recovery in ART-treated (1 year) HIV-1–infected individuals. We enrolled 155 HIV-1–infected individuals, with 102 individuals showing immunological success and 53 with immunological failure. Results: Through univariate analysis, we observed that the male sex (60.4%, P = 0.002) showed a higher median of age at treatment onset (34.8 years, P = 0.034) and higher time until virological suppression (6 months, P = 0.035), both risk factors for immune failure. Survival analysis revealed that individuals who started ART treatment with CD4+ T-cell count <200 cells/mm3 took a longer time to immunological recovery (median time = 27 months, P = 0.029). ART containing zidovudine also was associated with immune recovery in univariate e multivariate analysis. Variants in TNFRSF1A (rs767455: T and TT; rs1800692-rs767455: T-T combination) and NFKBIA (rs8904: A) genes were associated with immune failure, whereas NFKBIA (rs8904: GA) and TNF-α (rs1800629: GA) were with CD4+ T-cell recovery. Conclusions: Clinical-epidemiological variants in genes involved in extrinsic apoptosis pathways might influence the CD4+ T-cell immune recovery.
Languageen
PublisherNLM (Medline)
Subjectapoptosis
clinics
recovery immune
ART
polymorphisms
TitleBrief Report: Polymorphisms in TNF-α/TNFR1 Pathway Genes Are Associated With CD4+ T-Cell Recovery in HIV-1–Infected Individuals on Antiretroviral Therapy
TypeArticle
Pagination322-327
Issue Number3
Volume Number88


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