Reconciling founder variant multiplicity of HIV-1 infection with the rate of CD4+ decline.

James Baxter ORCID logo ; Ch Julián Villabona-Arenas ORCID logo ; Robin N Thompson ORCID logo ; Stéphane Hué ORCID logo ; Roland R Regoes ORCID logo ; Roger D Kouyos ORCID logo ; Huldrych F Günthard ORCID logo ; Jan Albert ORCID logo ; Andrew Leigh Brown ORCID logo ; Katherine E Atkins ORCID logo ; (2024) Reconciling founder variant multiplicity of HIV-1 infection with the rate of CD4+ decline. Journal of the Royal Society, Interface / the Royal Society, 21 (219). 20240255-. ISSN 1742-5689 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2024.0255
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HIV-1 transmission precipitates a stringent genetic bottleneck, with 75% of new infections initiated by a single genetic variant. Where multiple variants initiate infection, recipient set point viral load (SpVL) and the rate of CD4+ T cell decline may be elevated, but these findings remain inconsistent. Here, we summarised the evidence for this phenomenon, then tested whether previous studies possessed sufficient statistical power to reliably identify a true effect of multiple variant infection leading to higher SpVL. Next, we combined models of HIV-1 transmission, heritability and disease progression to understand whether available data suggest a faster CD4+ T cell decline would be expected to associated with multiple variant infection, without an explicit dependency between the two. First, we found that most studies had insufficient power to identify a true significant difference, prompting an explanation for previous inconsistencies. Next, our model framework revealed we would not expect to observe a positive association between multiple variant infections and faster CD4+ T cell decline, in the absence of an explicit dependency. Consequently, while empirical evidence may be consistent with a positive association between multiple variant infection and faster CD4+ T cell decline, further investigation is required to establish a causal basis.


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