HIV+ children defy odds
SOME HIV- infected and untreated children do not develop AIDS.
A new study shows that they control the virus in a different way from the few infected adults who remain disease-free, and sheds light on the reasons for this difference.
Children who are HIV- positive but remain free of AIDS are very rare. In the absence of anti-retroviral therapy, over 99 percent of individuals infected with HIV go on to develop fullblown AIDS, and the condition evolves more rapidly in children than in adults.
However, between 5 and 10 percent of perinatally infected HIV- positive children avoid this fate, as an international research collaboration, led by Dr Maximilian Muenchhoff at LMU’s Max von Pettenkofer Institute and colleagues based at the University of Oxford (Professor Philip Goulder), report in the current issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine.
The group has characterised the immunological responses of a cohort of these so-called non-progressors — HIV- positive children in South Africa who contracted the infection from their mothers but who remain healthy.
At the time of the study, the average age of the cohort was just under 8½ years old.
The investigations reveal that these children have high concentrations of circulating HIV particles, although their immune system remains fully functional.
“Interestingly however, these infected but healthy children exhibit only low levels of immune activation. In addition, while the spectrum of cell types that contain the virus — the so-called viral reservoir — is very complex, it is predominantly restricted to short-lived CD4+ T cells in these young non-progressors,” says Dr Maximilian Muenchhoff.
In addition, the researchers found that most of these children have high levels of potent and broadly neutralising antibodies directed against HIV.
These features of the immune response in healthy HIV- infected children show a striking resemblance to that observed in the more than 40 species of African monkeys which are the natural hosts of Simian Immunodeficiency Virus ( SIV) — from which HIV itself is derived.
Although the virus replicates very efficiently in these primates, infected animals show no signs of immune dysfunction. Here too, shortlived CD4+ T cells serve as the primary viral reservoir, and levels of immune activation are low, as seen in the study cohort. In contrast to this picture, the vast majority of HIV- infected AIDS patients, both adults and children, display all the signs of chronic activation of the immune system.
Furthermore, this condition persists even under anti-retroviral therapy which effectively reduces viral numbers, and it is also associated with long-term complications, such as an increased risk of cardiovascular disease.
The new findings are, therefore, of interest not only with respect to the development of effective HIV vaccines, they may also provide pointers toward potential interventions for patients with chronic HIV infections.
“This is a remarkable clinical study from the epicentre of the HIV pandemic. The ability of these children to maintain an intact immune system in the face of ongoing viral replication and in the absence of anti-retroviral therapy can provide us with new insights into hitherto unknown defence mechanisms, which could eventually benefit other HIV patients,” says Professor Oliver T. Keppler, chair of Virology at the Pettenkofer Institute, and former head of the German Reference Centre for Retroviruses in Frankfurt am Main.
The 170 members of the study cohort in Durban, South Africa, were infected with HIV by mother-to-child transmission. However, since these children showed no symptoms of disease, the fact that they were infected was, in most cases, discovered only several years later when their mothers had developed AIDS and sought medical attention. — medicalexpress.com.