Timely HAART initiation may pave the way for a better viral control
Open Access
- 1 March 2011
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 11 (1), 56
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-11-56
Abstract
When to initiate antiretroviral therapy in HIV infected patients is a difficult clinical decision. Actually, it is still a matter of discussion whether early highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) during primary HIV infection may influence the dynamics of the viral rebound, in case of therapy interruption, and overall the main disease course. In this article we use a computational model and clinical data to identify the role of HAART timing on the residual capability to control HIV rebound after treatment suspension. Analyses of clinical data from three groups of patients initiating HAART respectively before seroconversion (very early), during the acute phase (early) and in the chronic phase (late), evidence differences arising from the very early events of the viral infection. The computational model allows a fine grain assessment of the impact of HAART timing on the disease outcome, from acute to chronic HIV-1 infection. Both patients' data and computer simulations reveal that HAART timing may indeed affect the HIV control capability after treatment discontinuation. In particular, we find a median time to viral rebound that is significantly longer in very early than in late patients. A timing threshold is identified, corresponding to approximately three weeks post-infection, after which the capability to control HIV replication is lost. Conversely, HAART initiation occurring within three weeks from the infection could allow to preserve a significant control capability. This time could be related to the global triggering of uncontrolled immune activation, affecting residual immune competence preservation and HIV reservoir establishment.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The immune response during acute HIV-1 infection: clues for vaccine developmentNature Reviews Immunology, 2009
- Immune control of HIV-1 infection after therapy interruption: immediate versus deferred antiretroviral therapyBMC Infectious Diseases, 2009
- HIV-1 viral rebound dynamics after a single treatment interruption depends on time of initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapyAIDS, 2008
- Immune activation and inflammation in HIV‐1 infection: causes and consequencesThe Journal of Pathology, 2007
- Mutation, Fitness, Viral Diversity, and Predictive Markers of Disease Progression in a Computational Model of HIV Type 1 InfectionAIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2004
- When to initiate highly active antiretroviral therapy: a cohort approach.American Journal of Epidemiology, 2003
- Design and implementation of an immune system simulatorComputers in Biology and Medicine, 2001
- Immunologic and virologic response to highly active antiretroviral therapy in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort StudyAIDS, 2001
- Positive Effects of Combined Antiretroviral Therapy on CD4 + T Cell Homeostasis and Function in Advanced HIV DiseaseScience, 1997
- A computer model of cellular interactions in the immune systemImmunology Today, 1992