Persistent HIV-1 replication is associated with lower antiretroviral drug concentrations in lymphatic tissues
Nebraska Medical Center · University of Nebraska Medical Center · +7 more institutions
Abstract
Antiretroviral therapy can reduce HIV-1 to undetectable levels in peripheral blood, but the effectiveness of treatment in suppressing replication in lymphoid tissue reservoirs has not been determined. Here we show in lymph node samples obtained before and during 6 mo of treatment that the tissue concentrations of five of the most frequently used antiretroviral drugs are much lower than in peripheral blood. These lower concentrations correlated with continued virus replication measured by the slower decay or increases in the follicular dendritic cell network pool of virions and with detection of viral RNA in productively infected cells. The evidence of persistent replication associated with apparently…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.17
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 58
Authors
17- CVCourtney V. FletcherCorresponding
Nebraska Medical Center, University of Nebraska Medical Center
- KAK A Staskus
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Orthopedics
- SWStephen W. Wietgrefe
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Orthopedics
- MRMeghan Rothenberger
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Orthopedics
- CRCavan Reilly
University of Minnesota, Cancer Research And Biostatistics, Twin Cities Orthopedics
Topics & keywords
- Lymphatic system
- Viral replication
- Immune system
- Viral load
- Biology
- Lymph node
- Virus
- Virology
- Good health and well-being