Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5654842 Clinical Immunology 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Antibody responses to HCV are lower in untreated HIV/HCV patients than HCV patients.•HCV-specific antibody responses increase during antiretroviral therapy.•Neutralising antibodies may contribute to control of viral replication in some patients.

Antibody responses have not been fully characterised in chronically HIV/HCV patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART). Seventeen HIV/HCV patients receiving ART were followed for a median (range) interval of 597 (186-766) weeks. Prior to ART, HIV/HCV patients had lower levels of antibodies reactive with HCV core and JFH-1, and lower genotype cross-reactive neutralising antibodies (nAb) titres, than HCV patients. Levels of JFH-1 reactive antibody increased on ART, irrespective of CD4+ T-cell counts or changes in serum ALT levels. The appearance of nAb coincided with control of HCV viral replication in five HIV/HCV patients. In other patients, HCV viral loads remained elevated despite nAb responses. Sustained virological responses following HCV therapy were associated with reduced antibody responses to JFH-1 and core but elevated responses to non-structural proteins. We conclude that nAb responses alone may fail to clear HCV, but contribute to control of viral replication in some HIV/HCV patients responding to ART.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology
Authors
, , , , , ,