Objective: To investigate the influence of CD4 T-cell activation and regulatory populations in HIV-infected children antibody response to vaccination with a conjugate C polysaccharide vaccine.
Design: CD4 T-cell activation was evaluated by expression of CD38, HLA-DR and CCR5 molecules. Regulatory CD4 T cells (TReg) were characterized as FoxP3CD127CD25 and inducer T cells (TInd) as CD4FoxP3CD25CD39.
Methods: All patients (n = 36) were HIV-vertically infected, aged 2-17 years-old and were vaccinated with one vaccine injection. Blood samples were obtained before and after immunization to determine bactericidal antibody titers (SBA), CD4 T-cell activation and frequency of TReg and TInd subsets (multiparametric flow cytometry).
Results: Children not-responding (n = 18) to MenC vaccine expressed higher frequency of activated CD4 T cells (HLA-DRCD38CCR5) than responders (n = 18), both before and after vaccination (P < 0.05). A significant higher frequency of TReg was detected in responders compared with nonresponders (P = 0.0001). We also detected an inverse correlation between CD4DRCD38CCR5 (P = 0.01) or CD4DRCD38 (P = 0.02) T cells and TReg cell frequency after vaccination. CD4 T-cell activation negatively correlated (P = 0.006) with postvaccination SBA titers but a positive correlation (P = 0.0001) was detected between TReg cells and SBA. TReg and TInd subsets were inversely correlated (P = 0.04).
Conclusion: Our findings suggest that higher CD4 T-cell activation leads to poor vaccine response in children living with HIV, which may be associated with a TReg/TInd disequilibrium.