Infection with GB Virus C and Reduced Mortality among HIV-Infected Patients
Hans L. Tillmann, M.D., Hans Heiken, M.D., Adriana Knapik-Botor, Stefan Heringlake, M.D., Johann Ockenga, M.D., Judith C. Wilber, Ph.D., Bernd Goergen, Ph.D., Jill Detmer, B.S., Martin McMorrow, M.Sc., Matthias Stoll, M.D., Reinhold E. Schmidt, M.D., and Michael P. Manns, M.D.
Background The flavivirus GB virus C (GBV-C, also designatedhepatitis G virus) was identified in a search for hepatitisviruses, but no disease is currently known to be associatedwith it. We investigated the relation between coinfection withGBV-C and the long-term outcome in patients infected with thehuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Methods A total of 197 HIV-positive patients were followed prospectivelybeginning in 1993 or 1994. Of these patients, 33 (16.8 percent)tested positive for GBV-C RNA, 112 (56.9 percent) had detectableantibodies against the GBV-C envelope protein E2, and 52 (26.4percent) had no marker of GBV-C infection and were consideredunexposed. We assessed the relation between GBV-C infectionand the progression of HIV disease. We also tested 169 GBV-Cpositiveplasma samples with a quantitative branched-chain DNA (bDNA)assay in order to investigate possible correlations betweenGBV-C viral load and both the CD4+ cell count and the HIV load.
Results Among the patients who tested positive for GBV-C RNA,survival was significantly longer, and there was a slower progressionto the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) (P<0.001for both comparisons). Survival after the development of AIDSwas also better among the GBV-Cpositive patients. Theassociation of GBV-C viremia with reduced mortality remainedsignificant in analyses stratified according to age and CD4+cell count. In an analysis restricted to the years after highlyactive antiretroviral therapy became available, the presenceof GBV-C RNA remained predictive of longer survival (P=0.02).The HIV load was lower in the GBV-Cpositive patientsthan in the GBV-Cnegative patients. The GBV-C load correlatedinversely with the HIV load (r=0.33, P<0.001) butdid not correlate with the CD4+ cell count.
Conclusions Coinfection with GBV-C is associated with a reducedmortality rate in HIV-infected patients. GBV-C is not knownto cause any disease, but it is possible that its presence leadsto an inhibition of HIV replication. However, GBV-C infectioncould also be a marker for the presence of other factors thatlead to a favorable HIV response.
Source Information
From the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology (H.L.T., A.K.-B., S.H., J.O., M.P.M.) and the Department of Clinical Immunology (H.H., M.S., R.E.S.), Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Hannover, Germany; and Bayer Diagnostics, Emeryville, Calif. (J.C.W., B.G., J.D., M.M.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Tillmann at the Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Carl Neuberg Str. 1, 30623 Hannover, Germany, or at tillmann{at}tx-amb.mh-hannover.de.
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