Browsing by Author "Lederman, Michael M"
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Item Open Access Country of residence is associated with distinct inflammatory biomarker signatures in HIV-infected patients.(J Virus Erad, 2017-01-01) Manion, Maura; Andrade, Bruno B; DerSimonian, Rebecca; Gu, Wenjuan; Rupert, Adam; Musselwhite, Laura W; Sierra-Madero, Juan G; Belaunzaran-Zamudio, Pablo F; Sanne, Ian; Lederman, Michael M; Sereti, IriniBACKGROUND: Inflammation and coagulation biomarkers are independent predictors of morbidity and mortality in HIV-infected patients. The impact of country of residence on these biomarkers is unknown and was investigated in persons at similar stages of HIV infection. METHODS: Cryopreserved plasma specimens were analysed from 267 ART-naive patients with CD4 cell counts <100 cells/μl from Mexico (n=124) and South Africa (n=143). Biomarkers were compared and dimension reduction analyses were performed to highlight biosignatures according to nationality, gender and tuberculosis co-infection. RESULTS: Mexican patients were significantly different from South Africans with regard to age, gender, CD4 cell count, haemoglobin, presence of AIDS-defining illness and prevalence of active tuberculosis. After adjusting for baseline characteristics, patients from Mexico had higher levels of IFN-γ, IL-8, and CXCL-10 whereas patients from South Africa had higher levels of fibrinogen, LTB4, P-selectin, protein S, and sCD40 ligand. The effect of country on the profile of biomarker expression was stronger than gender differences and tuberculosis co-infection. CONCLUSION: Inflammation and coagulation biomarkers vary significantly by country. Further studies are needed to evaluate how these differences may contribute to HIV pathogenesis and prognosis in diverse populations and how they can be accounted for in studies using biomarkers as surrogate end points.Item Open Access Determinants of protection among HIV‐exposed seronegative persons: an overview.(J Infect Dis, 2010-11-01) Lederman, Michael M; Alter, Galit; Daskalakis, Demetre C; Rodriguez, Benigno; Sieg, Scott F; Hardy, Gareth; Cho, Michael; Anthony, Donald; Harding, Clifford; Weinberg, Aaron; Silverman, Robert H; Douek, Daniel C; Margolis, Leonid; Goldstein, David B; Carrington, Mary; Goedert, James JBoth clinical experience and a growing medical literature indicate that some persons who have been exposed to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection remain uninfected. Although in some instances this may represent good fortune, cohorts of uninfected persons have been reported who are considered at high risk for infection. In these cohorts a variety of characteristics have been proposed as mediating protection, but to date only the 32–base pair deletion in the chemokine (C‐C motif) receptor 5 gene, which results in complete failure of cell surface expression of this coreceptor, has been associated with high‐level protection from HIV infection. With this in mind, there are probably many other factors that may individually or in combination provide some level of protection from acquisition of HIV infection. Because some of these factors are probably incompletely protective or inconsistently active, identifying them with confidence will be difficult. Nonetheless, clarifying the determinants of protection against HIV infection is a high priority that will require careful selection of high‐risk uninfected cohorts, who should undergo targeted studies of plausible mediators and broad screening for unexpected determinants of protection.Item Open Access Shared monocyte subset phenotypes in HIV-1 infection and in uninfected subjects with acute coronary syndrome.(Blood, 2012-11-29) Funderburg, Nicholas T; Zidar, David A; Shive, Carey; Lioi, Anthony; Mudd, Joseph; Musselwhite, Laura W; Simon, Daniel I; Costa, Marco A; Rodriguez, Benigno; Sieg, Scott F; Lederman, Michael MThe mechanisms responsible for increased cardiovascular risk associated with HIV-1 infection are incompletely defined. Using flow cytometry, in the present study, we examined activation phenotypes of monocyte subpopulations in patients with HIV-1 infection or acute coronary syndrome to find common cellular profiles. Nonclassic (CD14(+)CD16(++)) and intermediate (CD14(++)CD16(+)) monocytes are proportionally increased and express high levels of tissue factor and CD62P in HIV-1 infection. These proportions are related to viremia, T-cell activation, and plasma levels of IL-6. In vitro exposure of whole blood samples from uninfected control donors to lipopolysaccharide increased surface tissue factor expression on all monocyte subsets, but exposure to HIV-1 resulted in activation only of nonclassic monocytes. Remarkably, the profile of monocyte activation in uncontrolled HIV-1 disease mirrors that of acute coronary syndrome in uninfected persons. Therefore, drivers of immune activation and inflammation in HIV-1 disease may alter monocyte subpopulations and activation phenotype, contributing to a pro-atherothrombotic state that may drive cardiovascular risk in HIV-1 infection.Item Open Access Vitamin D, D-dimer, Interferon γ, and sCD14 Levels are Independently Associated with Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome: A Prospective, International Study(EBioMedicine, 2016-02-01) Musselwhite, Laura W; Andrade, Bruno B; Ellenberg, Susan S; Tierney, Ann; Belaunzaran-Zamudio, Pablo F; Rupert, Adam; Lederman, Michael M; Sanne, Ian; Sierra Madero, Juan G; Sereti, Irini© 2015To determine the immunological profile most important for IRIS prediction, we evaluated 20 baseline plasma biomarkers in Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) patients initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART). Patients were enrolled in a randomized, placebo-controlled ART initiation trial in South Africa and Mexico to test whether maraviroc could prevent IRIS. Participants were classified prospectively as having IRIS within 6 months of ART initiation. Twenty plasma biomarkers were measured at study enrollment for 267 participants. Biomarkers were tested for predicting IRIS with adjustment for covariates chosen through forward stepwise selection. Sixty-two participants developed IRIS and of these 19 were tuberculosis (TB)-IRIS. Baseline levels of vitamin D and higher D-dimer, interferon gamma (IFNγ), and sCD14 were independently associated with risk of IRIS in multivariate analyses. TB-IRIS cases exhibited a distinct biosignature from IRIS related to other pathogens, with increased levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), sCD14, IFNγ, and lower levels of Hb that could be captured by a composite risk score. Elevated markers of Type 1 T helper (Th1) response, monocyte activation, coagulation and low vitamin D were independently associated with IRIS risk. Interventions that decrease immune activation and increase vitamin D levels warrant further study.