Asthma risk increases in children treated for HIV
Reported June 11, 2008
HOUSTON -- (June 11, 2008) -- Children
whose immune systems rebound after treatment with potent anti-viral drugs for
HIV infection face an increased risk of developing asthma, said a federally
funded consortium of researchers led by those from Baylor College of Medicine in
a report that appears online in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
"We think this occurs because important immune system components called CD4
cells increase in children treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy,"
said Dr. William T. Shearer, professor of pediatrics and immunology at BCM in
Houston and chief of the allergy and immunology service at Texas Children's
Hospital. He is also senior author of the report. CD4 cells are thought to be
associated with the inflammation in the lung tissue that accompanies asthma.
When CD4 cells decline in children with HIV, their asthma symptoms also
decrease.
Shearer and his colleagues evaluated the use of asthma medication among children
with HIV who took the anti-HIV drugs and those who did not. They found that
about one-third of those on the anti-HIV medications used asthma drugs compared
to 11.5 percent of those who did not take anti-HIV drugs.
Shearer said a study that evaluates the lung function of children with HIV on
anti-viral therapy would help explain how an increase in the immune system
affects the risk of asthma.
"This AIDS model of asthma might help understand at a molecular level what is
causing the current epidemic of asthma among children more generally," he said.
Others who took part in the study include Samuel B. Foster and Mary E. Paul of
BCM and Texas Children's; Kenneth McIntosh of Harvard Medical School, Bruce
Thompson, Ming Lu and Wanrong Yin of Clinical Trials and Surveys Corporation in
Baltimore, MD., Kenneth C. Rich of the University of Illinois in Chicago,
Hermann Mendez of the State University of New York in Brooklyn, Leslie K.
Serchuck of the National Institute of Child Health and Development in Bethesda,
MD and Clemente Diaz of the Puerto Rico School of Medicine in San Juan.
Funding for this work came from the National Institutes of Health, the Pediatric
Research and Education Fund at Baylor College of Medicine; the David Fund and
the Pediatric AIDS Fund and Immunology Research Fund at Texas Children's
Hospital.
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