The Use of Leukapheresis to Support HIV Pathogenesis Studies
Despite the dramatic improvements that have resulted from combination antiretroviral treatment, long-term efficacy, toxicity, cost, and the requirements for life-long adherence remain as formidable challenges. Also, there is emerging consensus that persistent HIV-associated disease occurs during long-term highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). This disease may be due to either direct drug-toxicity and/or persistent viral replication/production and/or persistent HIV-associated inflammation. Hence, strategies aimed at achieving complete viral eradication may be needed in order to fully restore health among HIV infected individuals. Even if complete eradication proves impossible-as most believe to be the case-a less rigorous but still desirable outcome might be achieving durable control of virus in the absence of therapy. That a functional cure is possible is well illustrated by those rare individuals who are able to durably control replication competent virus in the absence of therapy (elite controllers). A more complete understanding of the relationship between inflammation and viral persistence is necessary before more rationale studies of HIV eradication can be designed. Also, a well validated high through-put virologic assay needs to be developed that can estimate the size of the latent reservoir. Since the level of replication competent virus in long-term treated patients (and in elite controllers) is very small (\< 1% of CD4 cells harbor HIV), large numbers of CD4+ T cells most be obtained from study participants in order to routinely isolate and quantify virus persistence.
• HIV seropositive
• Able to give informed consent
• Willing to undergo blood sampling and/or leukapheresis
• Meeting one of the following criteria: (1) on stable highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) with a recent undetectable viral load (\< 50 copies/mL) (HAART suppressed), (2) antiretroviral untreated with an undetectable viral load (\< 50 copies/mL) (elite controllers) and (3) antiretroviral untreated with a detectable viral load (\> 1000 copies/mL) (non-controllers)