Litcius/Paper detail

False-Positive Human Immunodeficiency Virus Test Results in Patients Receiving Lentivirus-Based Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapy: Case Report, Review of the Literature, and Proposed Recommendations

Julian A. Villalba, Marcela V. Maus, Matthew J. Frigault, Rebecca Zaffini, Rajesh T. Gandhi, Eric Rosenberg, Mark J. Siedner

2021The Journal of Infectious Diseases16 citationsDOI

Abstract

There are emerging reports of false-positive HIV nucleic acid testing (NAT) in patients who have received chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies. We present a case of a 66-year-old-woman with primary-refractory stage IIIA double-hit high-grade B-cell lymphoma, in whom we detected false-positive HIV-1 NAT results after receipt of a third-generation self-inactivating investigational lentivirus-based CAR T-cell therapy. We reviewed the current state of the science on HIV-1 NAT and found that all reported false-positive cases have occurred in the setting of lentivirus-based CAR T-cell therapy and testing with FDA-approved platforms targeting the 5'LTR genomic region. Herein, we offer recommendations for HIV diagnostic testing in patients undergoing this mode of therapy. Clinicians managing this patient population should be aware of cross-reactivity between these therapeutic agents and commonly used HIV-1 NAT assays.

Topics & Concepts

LentivirusChimeric antigen receptorNatMedicinePopulationVirologyImmunologyAntigenHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)OncologyT cellViral diseaseImmune systemEnvironmental healthComputer scienceComputer networkCAR-T cell therapy researchVirus-based gene therapy researchCRISPR and Genetic Engineering