Objective: To determine the frequency of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) oropharyngeal shedding during HIV infection in homosexual men in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study.
Design: The cohort consisted of 210 men who were HIV-seronegative at their baseline study visit, 39 of whom seroconverted to HIV at a later date, and 73 asymptomatic and mildly symptomatic men with HIV infection of indeterminate duration.
Methods: EBV in throat washings was detected by transformation of newborn cord blood lymphocytes.
Results: EBV was isolated from 49% (35 out of 71) of the HIV-seropositive and 16% (33 out of 204) of the HIV-seronegative homosexual men tested at their baseline visit. Elevated EBV shedding frequency was noted 6 months before, as well as during the first HIV-seropositive clinic visit, in the men who seroconverted to HIV. Seronegative men who shed EBV at their baseline visit seroconverted to HIV within a shorter period than did non-shedders during 5 years of follow-up. Shedding of EBV was not significantly associated with either abnormal T-cell numbers, clinical symptoms or risk for development of AIDS.
Conclusions: There is an increased rate of EBV shedding in HIV-seropositive homosexual men that occurs very early in the course of HIV infection.