Hepatitis C does not slow down HIV recovery
Monday, May 03, 2010
Research has debunked the belief that
hepatitis C virus slows down immune system’s ability to restore itself
after HIV patients are treated with combination drugs known as the
‘cocktail’.
Hepatitis C infection is more serious in
HIV-infected people, leading to rapid liver damage, according to the
Centre for Disease Control.
Intravenous drug use is a main method
of contraction for both HIV and hepatitis C. Besides, 50 to 90 percent
of HIV-infected drug users are also infected with hepatitis C.
Wake
Forest Baptist researchers looked at whether having hepatitis C
co-infection impairs immune restoration in patients receiving highly
active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) or ‘cocktail’ to suppress their
HIV infection.
The research focused on levels of CD4 cells, the
immune cell that is attacked by the HIV virus, and their ability to
rebuild after HIV is suppressed.
“We’ve been observing that in
some patients co-infected with hepatitis C, we were treating their HIV
with ‘cocktail’ but didn’t always get very good restoration of CD4,”
said Marina Nunez, co-author of the paper and an assistant professor of
infectious diseases.
“Some studies suggested it was because of
the hepatitis C. This study said it’s not the presence of active
hepatitis C replication.
“From a clinical standpoint, although
these findings will not alter the clinical management of HIV-hepatitis
C-co-infected patients, they make clear that even after successful
treatment of the HCV infection, some patients may still not get an
adequate CD4 recovery under HIV treatment.”
For the
retrospective study, researchers examined existing medical records of
322 patients from two separate databases - one from Madrid and the other
from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Centre.
Patients
were separated into two groups - those co-infected with hepatitis C and
HIV and those infected only with HIV.
Researchers reviewed CD4
levels before beginning HIV suppression and every year after for up to
three years while the patients continuously received HAART, an HIV
treatment consisting of three different types of medicines used by many
patients, and formerly referred to as the HIV `cocktail’.
Years
of clinical experience have shown that, with ‘cocktail’ treatment
suppressing the HIV, CD4 levels are typically able to restore
themselves, Nunez said.
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