Low levels of HIV-1 RNA detected in the cerebrospinal fluid after up to 10 years of suppressive therapy are associated with local immune activation

V Dahl, J Peterson, D Fuchs, M Gisslen, S Palmer… - Aids, 2014 - journals.lww.com
V Dahl, J Peterson, D Fuchs, M Gisslen, S Palmer, RW Price
Aids, 2014journals.lww.com
Objective and design: Though combination antiretroviral therapy reduces the concentration
of HIV-1 RNA in both plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) below the detection limit of
clinical assays, low levels of HIV-1 RNA are frequently detectable in plasma using more
sensitive assays. We examined the frequency and magnitude of persistent low-level HIV-1
RNA in CSF and its relation to the central nervous system (CNS) immune activation.
Methods: CSF and plasma HIV-1 RNA were measured using the single-copy assay with a …
Abstract
Objective and design:
Though combination antiretroviral therapy reduces the concentration of HIV-1 RNA in both plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) below the detection limit of clinical assays, low levels of HIV-1 RNA are frequently detectable in plasma using more sensitive assays. We examined the frequency and magnitude of persistent low-level HIV-1 RNA in CSF and its relation to the central nervous system (CNS) immune activation.
Methods:
CSF and plasma HIV-1 RNA were measured using the single-copy assay with a detection limit of 0.3 copies/ml in 70 CSF and 68 plasma samples from 45 treated HIV-1-infected patients with less than 40 copies/ml of HIV-1 RNA in both fluids by standard clinical assays. We also measured CSF neopterin to assess intrathecal immune activation. Theoretical drug exposure was estimated using the CNS penetration-efficacy score of treatment regimens.
Results:
CSF HIV-1 RNA was detected in 12 of the 70 CSF samples (17%) taken after up to 10 years of suppressive therapy, compared to 39 of the 68 plasma samples (57%) with a median concentration of less than 0.3 copies/ml in CSF compared to 0.3 copies/ml in plasma (P< 0.0001). CSF samples with detectable HIV-1 RNA had higher CSF neopterin levels (mean 8.2 compared to 5.7 nmol/l; P= 0.0085). Patients with detectable HIV-1 RNA in CSF did not differ in pretreatment plasma HIV-1 RNA levels, nadir CD4+ cell count or CNS penetration-efficacy score.
Conclusion:
Low-level CSF HIV-1 RNA and its association with elevated CSF neopterin highlight the potential for the CNS to serve as a viral reservoir and for persistent infection to cause subclinical CNS injury.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins