Litcius/Paper detail

Detectable HIV-1 in semen in individuals with very low blood viral loads

Samuel Mundia Kariuki, Philippe Selhorst, Jennifer Norman, Karen Cohen, Kevin Rebe, Carolyn Williamson, Jeffrey R. Dorfman

2020Virology Journal27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Several reports indicate that a portion (5-10%) of men living with HIV-1 intermittently shed HIV-1 RNA into seminal plasma while on long term effective antiretroviral therapy (ART). This is highly suggestive of an HIV-1 reservoir in the male genital tract. However, the status of this reservoir in men living with HIV-1 who are not under treatment is underexplored and has implications for understanding the origins and evolution of the reservoir. FINDING: Forty-three HIV-1 positive, antiretroviral therapy naïve study participants attending a men's health clinic were studied. Semen viral loads and blood viral loads were generally correlated, with semen viral loads generally detected in individuals with blood viral loads > 10,000 cp/ml. However, we found 1 individual with undetectable viral loads (<20cp/ml) and 2 individuals with very low blood viral load (97 and 333cp/ml), but with detectable HIV-1 in semen (485-1157 copies/semen sample). Blood viral loads in the first individual were undetectable when tested three times over the prior 5 years. CONCLUSIONS: Semen HIV-1 viral loads are usually related to blood viral loads, as we confirm. Nonetheless, this was not true in a substantial minority of individuals suggesting unexpectedly high levels of replication in the male genital tract in a few individuals, despite otherwise effective immune control. This may reflect establishment of a local reservoir of HIV-1 populations.

Topics & Concepts

Viral loadSemenBiologyVirologyImmunologyHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Sex organViral replicationPhysiologyVirusGeneticsHIV Research and TreatmentHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsHIV-related health complications and treatments