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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, Feb 1997, 449-453, Vol 41, No. 2
DS Stein and GL Drusano
We investigated the relationships between changes in CD4 lymphocytes counts
over 24 weeks after the initiation of therapy with indinavir at dosages of
> or = 2.4 g/day (n = 15) in human immunodeficiency virus- positive
patients and compared them to the baseline values. Starting CD4 count were
linked to the time-weighted average CD4 cell count (return) through a
nonlinear effect model. The diminution of destruction of CD4 cells after
the initiation of indinavir therapy was estimated by fitting simultaneous
differential equations to the data by using a linked lymph node (LN)-blood
(BL) (two-compartment) system in which there is a constant rate of
generation (R), first-order transfer rate constants (KLN-BL and KBL-LN) of
compartment exchange, and first- order rate constants of CD4 destruction in
the absence and presence of indinavir (KLN-OUT1 and KLN-OUT2). The
half-life of CD4 lymphocytes was calculated from the rate constants by
standard two-compartment methods. The CD4 lymphocyte counts at the start
and return were linked in a sigmoid-Emax model were the maximal effect
(Emax) was at 574.6 cells/microliters and 50% of the effect occurred at
157.1 cells/microliters (r2 = 0.94; P < 0.001). The mean +/- standard
deviation (median) KLN-OUT2 was 0.574 +/- 0.202 (0.589), indicating that
indinavir decrease the destruction of CD4 cells by circa 41 to 42%. The
mean (median) CD4 half-life was 11.5 +/- 5.72 day (10.3 days). In
multivariate analysis, KLN-OUT2 was significantly correlated with starting
the CD4 cells count and the change in the CD4 cell count on therapy. The
relationship between CD4 lymphocyte half-life and the starting CD4
lymphocyte count was hyperbolic, with a rapid increase in half-life as the
CD4 count decreased. On the basis of the calculated half-life, the average
production (destruction) of CD4 lymphocytes was approximately 3 x 10(9)
cells/day, with an individual variation of 44- fold. These findings suggest
that (i) the CD4 lymphocyte cell count at the start is significantly
correlated to both the decrease in the destruction rate of CD4 cells and
the degree of change in the CD4 lymphocytes on therapy, (ii) the lower the
initial CD4 lymphocyte count, the higher the amount of CD4 lymphocyte
turnover and the lower the ability of the immune system to increase
absolute CD4 lymphocyte levels after viral suppression, consistent with a
decreased regenerative capacity with progression of disease; and (iii) the
increase in CD4 lymphocytes is likely secondary to the expansion of
proliferating pool of cells since our determinations are based on 24 weeks
of effect.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Modeling of the change in CD4 lymphocyte counts in patients before and after administration of the human immunodeficiency virus protease inhibitor indinavir
Department of Medicine, Albany Medical College, New York 12208, USA.
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