Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine if there is a biological mechanism that explains the association between HIV disease progression and increased mortality with low circulating vitamin D levels; specifically, to determine if restoring vitamin D levels induced T-cell functional changes important for antiviral immunity.
DESIGN: This was a pilot, open-label, three-arm prospective phase 1 study.
METHODS: We recruited 28 patients with low plasma vitamin D (<50 nmol/l 25-hydroxyvitamin D3), comprising 17 HIV+ patients (11 on HAART, six treatment-naive) and 11 healthy controls, who received a single dose of 200 000 IU oral cholecalciferol. Advanced T-cell flow cytometry methods measured CD4 T-cell function associated with viral control in blood samples at baseline and 1-month after vitamin D supplementation.
RESULTS: One month of vitamin D supplementation restored plasma levels to sufficiency (>75 nmol/l) in 27 of 28 patients, with no safety issues. The most striking change was in HIV+ HAART+ patients, where increased frequencies of antigen-specific T cells expressing macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1β - an important anti-HIV blocking chemokine - were observed, with a concomitant increase in plasma MIP-1β, both of which correlated significantly with vitamin D levels. In addition, plasma cathelicidin - a vitamin D response gene with broad antimicrobial activity - was enhanced.
CONCLUSION: Vitamin D supplementation modulates disease-relevant T-cell functions in HIV-infected patients, and may represent a useful adjunct to HAART therapy.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1127-1135 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | AIDS (London, England) |
Volume | 29 |
Issue number | 10 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 19 Jun 2015 |