Liver 
                            Transplant Do Not Impair Immune Response in HIV/HCV 
                            Coinfected Patients
                          
                            
                             
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                                    | SUMMARY: 
                                      HIV/HCV coinfected patients who undergo 
                                      liver transplantation do not lose immune 
                                      responses to hepatitis C virus (HCV), HIV, 
                                      or opportunistic infections, according to 
                                      an analysis reported in the December 
                                      2009 Journal of Hepatology. This 
                                      study adds to the evidence that appropriately 
                                      selected coinfected individuals can be suitable 
                                      candidates for liver transplants. |  |  |  | 
                             
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                          By 
                            Liz Highleyman
                            
                            In recent years, a growing body of data has shown 
                            that HIV positive people 
                            can have nearly as good outcomes as HIV negative people 
                            after liver 
                            transplantation, assuming they have well-maintained 
                            immune function (CD4 count of at least 200 cells/mm3) 
                            and achieved HIV suppression with antiretroviral 
                            therapy (ART) -- or are expected to do so, if 
                            they are currently not on ART due to liver disease. 
                            
                          However, 
                            people with HCV do 
                            not fare as well as those who require liver transplants 
                            for other reasons, and this holds true for HIV/HCV 
                            coinfected as well as HIV negative recipients.
                          
                          Preservation 
                            of immune function after liver transplantation has 
                            not been well studied -- an issue addressed by Assia 
                            Samri and fellow investigators with the French ANRS-HC08 
                            "THEVIC" trial. The researchers aimed to 
                            determine whether liver transplantation is detrimental 
                            to the immune system, and in particular how this affects 
                            severity of HCV recurrence in the liver graft. 
                            
                            The study included 14 HIV/HCV coinfected patients 
                            receiving transplants due to HCV-related liver cirrhosis. 
                            Prior to transplantation they had HIV viral load < 
                            50 copies/mL and a median CD4 count of 276 cells/mm3. 
                            Of these patients, 9 received interferon-based hepatitis 
                            C therapy after transplantation. 
                            
                            Participants were followed for more than 2 years. 
                            HIV and HCV viral load were monitored, as well as 
                            degree of acute and chronic hepatitis. The investigators 
                            also assessed peripheral blood T-cell phenotypes and 
                            interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) immune responses against 
                            the HIV-1 p-24 core protein, HCV, and various opportunistic 
                            pathogens.
                            
                            Results 
                             
                          
                             
                              |  | Median 
                                HCV RNA viral load, CD4 counts, T-cell subsets, 
                                and number of IFN-gamma-producing T-cells responsive 
                                to HIV p24 and opportunistic pathogens did not 
                                change over time after transplantation. | 
                             
                              |  | HCV-specific 
                                T-cells were observed in samples from 2 patients 
                                prior to transplantation and in 2 others post-transplantation. | 
                             
                              |  | After 
                                in vitro amplification, HCV-specific IFN-gamma-producing 
                                T-cell responses were detected in 3 more patients 
                                post-transplantation. | 
                             
                              |  | Anti-HCV 
                                responses were independent of hepatitis C therapy. | 
                             
                              |  | Anti-HCV 
                                responses were undetectable, however, in patients 
                                with severe hepatitis or liver fibrosis. | 
                          
                           
                            Based on these findings, the study authors concluded, 
                            "These results demonstrate that liver transplantation 
                            in HIV/HCV coinfected patients is not deleterious 
                            to the immune system and does not alter immune responses 
                            directed against HCV, HIV, or opportunistic pathogens."
                            
                            Inserm, UMRS-945 Laboratoire d'Immunologie Cellulaire 
                            et Tissulaire, Centre Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, 
                            Paris, France; UPMC Univ Paris 06, Laboratoire d'Immunologie 
                            Cellulaire et Tissulaire, Paris, France; IFR113, Inserm, 
                            Laboratoire d'Immunologie Cellulaire et Tissulaire, 
                            Paris, France; Inserm, U785, Villejuif, France; Univ 
                            Paris-Sud, UMR-S785, Villejuif, France; AP-HP Hôpital 
                            Paul Brousse, Laboratoire de Virologie, Centre Hépato-Biliaire, 
                            Service Infectiologie & Laboratoire d'Anatomo 
                            Pathologie, Villejuif, France; Inserm, CIC4, Nantes, 
                            France; AP-HP Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, 
                            Laboratoire d'Immunologie Cellulaire et Tissulaire, 
                            Paris, France.
                            
                            1/15/10
                          Reference
                            A 
                            Samri, AM Roque-Afonso, O Beran, and others. Preservation 
                            of immune function and anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) 
                            immune responses after liver transplantation in HIV-HCV 
                            coinfected patients (ANRS-HC08 "THEVIC" 
                            trial). Journal of Hepatology 51(6): 1000-1009 
                            (Abstract). 
                            December 2009.