Effect of hepatitis C virus on the central nervous system of HIV-infected individuals

M. Gess, D. Forton
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Correspondence: Daniel Forton Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, St George’s University of London, Blackshaw Road, London SW17 0QT, United Kingdom Tel +44 208 725 3520 Fax +44 208 725 3032 Email dforton@sgul.ac.uk Abstract: Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is associated with a spectrum of neuropsychiatric manifestations ranging from asymptomatic cognitive impairment, detectable only by sensitive neurocognitive tests, to overt HIV-associated dementia. Highly active antiretroviral therapy has led to significant reductions in the incidence of severe HIVassociated dementia. However, the overall prevalence of milder HIV-associated cognitive disorders appears to be increasing as HIV-infected subjects live longer in the era of combined antiretroviral treatments. Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is also associated with neuropsychological symptoms and impaired cognitive performance in some patients, and recent evidence suggests that these central nervous system (CNS) symptoms may be caused by HCV entry into the brain via endothelial infection. Similarly to the neuropathological processes in HIV infection, microglial activation in HCV infected subjects may underlie the CNS metabolic abnormalities and impaired cognitive performance that have been described in studies of HCVinfected cohorts. A significant proportion of HIV-infected subjects are coinfected with HCV, but the impact and clinical importance of coinfection on cognitive function has only been addressed in a small number of research studies. There is some evidence that coinfection may adversely affect neurocognitive function; however, studies published thus far are limited by a number of confounding factors and small sample sizes. This article aims to review the current evidence examining neurocognitive function in HIVand HCV-monoinfection and further critically discusses previous studies that have explored the impact of coinfection with HCV on CNS function of HIV-infected cohorts. It is clear that, as the population of HIV-infected individuals ages and neurocognitive disorders persist in the post-combination antiretroviral treatment era, a better understanding of the neuropathological processes and improved characterization of deficits is required to allow development of better treatments. At the advent of interferon-free, directly acting antiviral therapies against HCV, this is increasingly important. The impact of CNS infection by these viruses remains poorly understood, both in terms of neurocognitive symptoms and as a potential mechanism for HCV virological relapse after treatment.
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丙型肝炎病毒对hiv感染者中枢神经系统的影响
通讯:Daniel Forton伦敦圣乔治大学胃肠病学和肝病科,Blackshaw路,伦敦SW17 0QT,英国电话+44 208 725 3520传真+44 208 725 3032电子邮件dforton@sgul.ac.uk摘要:感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)与一系列神经精神表现有关,从无症状认知障碍(仅通过敏感的神经认知测试可检测到)到明显的HIV相关痴呆。高效抗逆转录病毒疗法显著降低了严重艾滋病毒相关痴呆的发病率。然而,在抗逆转录病毒联合治疗时代,随着艾滋病毒感染者寿命的延长,轻度艾滋病毒相关认知障碍的总体流行率似乎在增加。慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染也与一些患者的神经心理症状和认知能力受损有关,最近的证据表明,这些中枢神经系统(CNS)症状可能是由HCV通过内皮感染进入大脑引起的。与HIV感染的神经病理过程类似,HCV感染受试者的小胶质细胞激活可能是CNS代谢异常和认知能力受损的基础,这在HCV感染队列的研究中已经描述过。相当比例的hiv感染者同时感染HCV,但同时感染对认知功能的影响和临床重要性仅在少数研究中得到解决。有证据表明,合并感染可能对神经认知功能产生不利影响;然而,迄今为止发表的研究受到许多混杂因素和小样本量的限制。本文旨在回顾目前关于hiv和HCV单感染的神经认知功能的证据,并进一步批判性地讨论先前的研究,这些研究探讨了HCV合并感染对hiv感染队列中枢神经系统功能的影响。显然,随着艾滋病毒感染者人口的老龄化和抗逆转录病毒联合治疗后神经认知障碍的持续存在,需要更好地了解神经病理过程和改进缺陷的特征,以便开发更好的治疗方法。随着无干扰素、直接作用于丙型肝炎病毒的抗病毒治疗的出现,这一点变得越来越重要。这些病毒对中枢神经系统感染的影响仍然知之甚少,无论是在神经认知症状方面,还是在治疗后HCV病毒学复发的潜在机制方面。
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