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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2003, p. 308-314, Vol. 10, No. 2
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.2.308-314.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Elevated Levels of Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 and Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinase 1 during the Acute Phase of Kawasaki Disease
Pong Kian Chua,1 Marian E. Melish,2 Qigui Yu,1 Richard Yanagihara,1,2 Kara S. Yamamoto,2 and Vivek R. Nerurkar1*
Retrovirology Research Laboratory, Pacific Biomedical Research Center,1
Department of Pediatrics, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 968222
Received 29 August 2002/
Returned for modification 31 October 2002/
Accepted 30 December 2002

ABSTRACT
Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute, self-limiting, multisystem
vasculitis of unknown etiology affecting infants and young children.
Unless treated promptly with high-dose intravenous gamma globulin
and aspirin, patients frequently develop coronary aneurysms.
Previously, matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9), which is secreted
complexed to tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1 (TIMP-1),
has been implicated in abdominal aortic aneurysm formation.
Since the clinical and pathological features of KD include inflammation
and weakening of blood vessels, we analyzed acute- and convalescent-phase
paired plasma or serum samples from 31 KD patients, 7 patients
who did not completely meet the criteria for KD, and 26 non-KD
controls (9 febrile and 17 afebrile patients) for pro-MMP-9
(92 kDa) enzyme activity by gelatin zymography and for active
MMP-9 (83 kDa), pro-MMP-9, and TIMP-1 protein levels by enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay. Statistical analysis was performed by using
Student
t tests, linear regression, and the Wilcoxon rank-sum
test. Markedly elevated pro-MMP-9 enzymatic activity, pro-MMP-9
protein levels, and TIMP-1 protein levels were found during
the acute phase of illness in patients with clinically established
KD and in patients who were suspected of having KD but did not
meet all of the criteria. There was no significant difference
in active MMP-9 levels. Furthermore, pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1 protein
levels were significantly elevated among KD patients, compared
to those of febrile and afebrile non-KD controls. The significantly
elevated pro-MMP-9 enzyme and protein levels during the acute
phase of KD may reflect vascular remodeling or an inflammatory
response to a microbial agent, suggesting a pathophysiological
role for MMP-9 in coronary aneurysm formation.

INTRODUCTION
Kawasaki disease (KD), an acute, febrile, exanthematous multisystem
illness that primarily affects infants and young children, is
characterized by widespread vascular inflammation of the coronary
arteries and other medium-sized arteries (
41). Although KD is
widely believed to have a microbial etiology, the causative
agent has not been identified (
4,
11,
29,
30,
34,
41). Treatment
for KD includes the use of intravenous gamma globulin (IVIG)
and high-dose aspirin.
Matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9), also known as gelatinase B, is a zinc-dependent, calcium-requiring metalloproteinase capable of degrading type IV and V collagens, as well as gelatins. Some of the biological functions of MMP-9 include rupture of fetal membrane (1) and wound repair (43), whereas pathologically, MMP-9 has been implicated in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (10), atherosclerosis (3), cardiomyopathy (15), and abdominal aortic aneurysm (5, 12, 18, 23, 24). Structurally, MMP-9 consists of a propeptide, a catalytic domain, and a carboxyl-terminal hemopexin domain, with the propeptide maintaining the enzyme in an inactive state, also known as pro-MMP-9 (92 kDa). Activation of pro-MMP-9 into active MMP-9 (83 kDa) occurs when the interaction between the active-site zinc molecule and a cysteine in the propeptide domain is disrupted by plasmin or active MMP-3 (27).
Because KD patients develop coronary arteritis, which is followed by aneurysm formation, we hypothesized that MMP-9 might be involved in the vascular remodeling and pathogenesis of KD. Additionally, since pro-MMP-9 is secreted complexed to TIMP-1 (40), we postulated that with increased pro-MMP-9 production, TIMP-1 protein levels are concomitantly elevated. In this report, we demonstrate significant elevations in pro-MMP-9 protein and enzyme levels, as well as TIMP-1 protein levels, during the acute phase of KD and suggest a role for MMP-9 in the pathogenesis of KD.
(This work was presented in part at the joint annual meeting of the American Pediatric Society and the Society for Pediatric Research in San Francisco, Calif., 1 to 4 May 1999, and at the 7th International Kawasaki Disease Symposium in Hakone, Japan, 4 to 7 December 2001.)

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study population.
Patients who presented with KD or with other acute febrile or
afebrile illnesses at the Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women
and Children (KMCWC) in Honolulu, Hawaii, from 1996 to 2000
were studied after informed consent was obtained from their
parents or guardians. Blood specimens were processed within
24 h of collection. Plasma samples from 35 KD patients and serum
samples from 3 KD patients were stored at -30°C until further
use. Plasma from all controls was separated and stored as described
above. Blood samples from 38 KD patients were drawn during the
acute phase of illness (before administration of IVIG) and during
convalescence (6 weeks to 3 months after disease onset), when
patients no longer exhibited clinical features of KD and elevated
inflammatory markers of C-reactive protein and the erythrocyte
sedimentation rate had returned to normal. This study was approved
by the KMCWC institutional research and ethics committee.
Gelatin zymography.
Protein concentrations in plasma or serum samples from KD and non-KD patients were measured with the Bio-Rad DC Protein Assay Kit (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.). Pro-MMP-2 and pro-MMP-9 enzyme activities were measured by gelatin zymography as previously described (26). Briefly, 15 µg of total protein was mixed with electrophoresis sample buffer (20% [wt/vol] glycerol, 4% [wt/vol] sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 62.5 mM Tris-HCl [pH 6.8], 0.1% [wt/vol] bromophenol blue) and loaded onto an 7.5% SDS-polyacrylamide gel containing 1 mg of type B gelatin from bovine skin (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo.) per ml. Gel electrophoresis was performed at 120 V for 1.5 h, and the gel was washed six times for 5 min each time with wash buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 5 mM CaCl2, 0.01% (wt/vol) NaN3, and 2.5% (vol/vol) Triton X-100 to remove the SDS from the gel and rinsed twice for 5 min each time in incubation buffer (same as wash buffer but without Triton X-100) and incubated overnight (18 h) in the incubation buffer. Gels were stained with Coomassie brilliant blue (0.1% [wt/vol] G250 in 50:20:30 methanol-acetic acid-distilled water) for 30 min and destained in destaining buffer (30:1:69 methanol-acetic acid-distilled water). Clear bands against a blue background, indicating gelatin lysis, were observed at 72 and 92 kDa, which are equivalent to pro-MMP-2 and pro-MMP-9 enzyme activities, respectively (Fig. 1). To quantitate the amount of enzymatic activity, we used the APP_Collage PPC4.0 Image Analysis software program (Fotodyne Inc., Hartland, Wis.). The amount of gelatin lysis was captured, and the band intensity was calculated on the basis of pixel counts and normalized against the background.
ELISA.
Pro-MMP-9 total protein, active MMP-9 enzyme, and TIMP-1 protein
levels were measured with sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay (ELISA) kits (RPN 2614, RPN 2634, and RPN 2611, respectively;
Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Company, Piscataway, N.J.) used in
accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. The pro-MMP-9
kit measures both human pro-MMP-9 and pro-MMP-9 complexed to
TIMP-1 but not active MMP-9, while the TIMP-1 kit measures both
human free TIMP-1 protein and TIMP-1 that is complexed with
MMP-1, MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-9. For our purposes, the MMP-9
activity ELISA kit was used to measure endogenous levels of
active MMP-9. To determine enzyme and protein stability, five
random samples from various collection dates were frozen and
thawed twice and tested by ELISA for enzyme activity and protein
levels. In accordance with the manufacturer's instructions,
the intraplate and interplate assay variability was 4.9 to 5.5%
(
n = 11) and 8.1 to 9.8% (
n = 12), respectively, for total pro-MMP-9
protein and 8.9 to 11.4% (
n = 11) and 12.4 to 15.2% (
n = 24)
for TIMP-1, respectively. For active MMP-9 enzyme assay, intraplate
variability was 3.1 to 4.3% (
n = 10), while interplate variability
was 20.2 to 21.7% (
n = 10).
Statistical analysis.
Student t tests, linear regression, and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test were employed to calculate the P values and coefficients of correlation of pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1 protein concentrations, pro-MMP-9 protein and enzyme levels, and pro-MMP-9 enzyme levels between the patients and controls.

RESULTS
Study population.
KD patients were classified as having complete or incomplete
KD on the basis of their complete or incomplete fulfillment
of the diagnostic clinical criteria established by the Kawasaki
Study Group (
41). All 38 KD patients were judged by one of two
experienced clinicians (M.E.M. or K.S.Y.). Diagnoses of febrile
patients were fever without focus, negative blood culture (
n = 4), gastroenteritis (
n = 2), pneumococcal bacteremia (
n =
1), sinusitis (
n = 1), and encephalomyelitis (
n = 1), while
afebrile patients were diagnosed with gastroenteritis and dehydration.
Plasma or serum samples were available from patients classified
as presenting with complete or incomplete KD and febrile and
afebrile non-KD patients (Table
1). Of the 38 KD patients, 8
were Japanese, 2 were Korean, 1 was Japanese-Korean, 2 were
Micronesian, and the remaining 25 were Filipino (
n = 8), Chinese
(
n = 7), part Hawaiian (
n = 2), Caucasian (
n = 1), Vietnamese
(
n = 1), and an admixture (
n = 6) of one or more of the aforementioned
ethnicities.
MMP-2 and MMP-9 enzyme activity.
A representative gelatin zymogram, with gelatin lysis at 92
and 72 kDa, corresponding to the pro-MMP-9 and pro-MMP-2 enzymes,
respectively, is shown in Fig.
1. The gelatinase activity was
inhibited with 10 mM EDTA (data not shown), thus verifying that
the gelatin lysis was due to the pro-MMP-9 and pro-MMP-2 enzymes.
Elevations in pro-MMP-9 enzyme activity were observed in acute-phase
plasma samples from patients with complete and incomplete KD,
compared to the respective convalescent-phase samples (Fig.
2A and Table
2). Patients with complete KD had significantly
elevated levels of pro-MMP-9 compared to febrile and afebrile
non-KD patients, whereas there was no statistically significant
difference in pro-MMP-9 enzyme activity between incomplete-KD
patients and febrile and afebrile non-KD patients. Additionally,
there was no statistically significant difference in pro-MMP-9
enzyme levels between complete- and incomplete-KD patients in
the acute phase (Table
2). Comparisons of various groups by
the nonparametric test concurred with results obtained with
the Student
t test for MMP-9 enzyme activity and MMP-9 and TIMP-1
protein concentrations. Pro-MMP-2 enzyme levels in the acute
phase of complete-KD patients were not significantly higher
than those of the convalescent-phase and afebrile patients but
were significantly elevated compared to those of febrile patients
(Table
2). For incomplete-KD patients, the acute-phase pro-MMP-2
levels were not significantly elevated compared to convalescent-phase,
febrile, and afebrile patients. There was also no significant
difference between complete- and incomplete-KD patients in the
acute phase (Table
2).
MMP-9 and TIMP-1 protein concentrations.
Mean pro-MMP-9 protein concentrations were significantly elevated
in the acute-phase samples of KD patients, compared to the respective
convalescent-phase samples, as well as compared to samples from
febrile and afebrile non-KD patients (Fig.
2B and Table
2).
Similarly, mean TIMP-1 protein concentrations were significantly
elevated in the acute phase of KD compared to the respective
convalescent phase, as well as compared to those of febrile
and afebrile non-KD patients (Fig.
2C and Table
2). As observed
previously, transient dilated coronary aneurysm (TDCA) or coronary
artery aneurysm (CAA) patients did not have concentrations of
pro-MMP-9 or TIMP-1 protein in their plasma greater than the
mean pro-MMP-9 or TIMP-1 protein levels in the acute phase of
complete KD, respectively.
Active MMP-9 levels measured with an ELISA kit showed no statistically significant difference between acute-phase KD patient plasma and the respective convalescent-phase plasma, KD patients and febrile controls, and complete-KD patients and afebrile controls (Table 2). We did, however, observe a statistically significant difference between incomplete-KD patients and afebrile controls, which could have been an artifact due to the small sample size in the incomplete-KD group. These results indicate that although pro-MMP-9 levels are higher in the plasma or serum of KD patients, not all pro-MMP-9 is activated into the active form of MMP-9 (83 kDa).
With the Student t test and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test, no statistically significant difference was found in pro-MMP-9 protein (P = 0.15) or enzyme (P = 0.26) activities or in TIMP-1 protein levels (P = 0.37) between complete-KD patients who presented at KMCWC before day 5 (n = 23) or between days 6 and 9 (n = 8) after the onset of clinical symptoms. Linear regression analysis showed a significant correlation between pro-MMP-9 protein levels and pro-MMP-9 enzyme activity during the acute phase of complete (r = 0.44, P < 0.01) and incomplete (r = 0.81, P < 0.01) KD, whereas no such correlation was observed in febrile non-KD patients (r = 0.17, P = 0.26) or in afebrile non-KD patients (r = 0.05, P = 0.36). A positive correlation was also found between pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1 proteins levels in the acute phase of complete KD (r = 0.18, P < 0.02) but not in patients with incomplete KD (r = 0.22, P = 0.29) or among febrile (r = 0.02, P = 0.64) or afebrile non-KD patients (r = 0.11, P = 0.19). There was no statistically significant difference in pro-MMP-2 and pro-MMP-9 enzyme activity, pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1 protein levels, and active MMP-9 levels after freezing and thawing of five random samples collected on various dates. Similarly, exclusion of three serum samples from the analysis did not lead to any difference in the data presented.

DISCUSSION
MMP-9 plays a major role in many physiological activities and
pathological conditions. Failure to regulate these functions
can be detrimental. For example, pro-MMP-9, as well as active
MMP-9, levels are significantly elevated among patients with
abdominal aortic aneurysms (
5,
12,
18,
23,
24). Since the clinical
presentation of KD involves vasculitis and coronary aneurysm,
we posited that MMP-9 enzyme and protein levels are elevated
in KD patients. Recently, three Japanese groups have independently
reported elevated levels of MMP-9, TIMP-1, and neutrophil elastase
in the serum or plasma of KD patients prior to infusion of IVIG
(
32,
35; K. Sakata, Z. Onouchi, K. Hamaoka, and Y. Yamamoto,
Abstr. 6th Int. Kawasaki Dis. Symp., abstr. 24, p. 21). Our
study is the first outside of Japan to demonstrate markedly
elevated pro-MMP-9 enzyme and protein levels during the acute
phase of KD. The uniformity of this response among Japanese
patients, as well as among non-Japanese patients of various
ethnic backgrounds in Hawaii, suggests that MMP-9 may play a
central role in the pathophysiology of KD.
Cellular sources of pro-MMP-9 include smooth-muscle cells and B and T lymphocytes (14, 21, 24, 37). More recently, Takeshita and colleagues demonstrated that the level of MMP-9 in serum was increased in KD patients and that this elevation correlated with the number of circulating leukocytes (35). We have observed that peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained during the acute phase of KD, when cultivated in serum-free medium, secrete high levels of pro-MMP-9 enzyme (Q. Yu, P. K. Chua, and V. Nerurkar, unpublished data). Collectively, these data suggest that immune cells are the main source of pro-MMP-9 in KD.
By using gelatin zymography, we were able to detect pro-MMP-9 (92 kDa) enzyme activity and negligible amounts of active MMP-9 (83 kDa) in all of our KD patients and controls. We performed ELISAs to detect endogenous levels of active MMP-9. The commercially available MMP-9 activity ELISA kit cross-reacts with both pro-MMP-9 and active MMP-9 and includes a step that activates all pro-MMP-9 into active MMP-9. Since we were only interested in measuring endogenous levels of active MMP-9, we did not activate pro-MMP-9. We detected very low levels of endogenously active MMP-9 by ELISA, with no statistically significant difference between KD (complete and incomplete) patients and febrile controls or between complete-KD patients and afebrile controls, but did observe a statistically significant difference between incomplete-KD patients and afebrile controls. In contrast, Takeshita et al. measured levels of active MMP-9 by first activating pro-MMP-9 in serum with 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate into active MMP-9 (35). They demonstrated that the level of active MMP-9 was higher in the acute phase of KD than in the convalescent phase and among healthy children. These data differ from our experimental setup, in which we specifically assayed for pro-MMP-9 and active MMP-9 levels separately. Our results showed that pro-MMP-9 levels are elevated in the acute phase of KD compared to those in convalescent-phase, febrile, and afebrile patients, whereas active levels of MMP-9 were not different between the groups. Our data are more indicative of the levels of proMMP-9 and active MMP-9 in the circulatory system.
Collectively, these results indicate that pro-MMP-9 levels are higher in KD patients and that very little pro-MMP-9 is activated in the plasma. The extremely small amount of active MMP-9 in the plasma is noteworthy, because a small change in the active MMP-9 level could result in detrimental modification of the entire circulatory system. Montgomery et al. demonstrated that B cells in culture secrete pro-MMP-9 but not the active form, and active MMP-9 could only be detected after aminophenylmercuric acetate activation (21). Similarly, we detected only pro-MMP-9, and not active MMP-9, in peripheral blood mononuclear cell culture supernatant from KD patients (Q. Yu and coworkers unpublished data).
Cytokines known to increase MMP-9 production include interleukin-1 (IL-1) (6, 17), IL-2 (21), tumor necrosis factor alpha (20), alpha interferon (IFN-
), IFN-
(13), and transforming growth factor beta (38). Of these cytokines, IL-2, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and IFN-
are elevated in KD. Furthermore, pro-MMP-9 levels have been demonstrated to be elevated in certain viral infections, most notably those caused by retroviruses and herpesviruses (2, 8, 9, 19, 33). Recently, Takeshita and colleagues suggested that the acute-phase response to lipopolysaccharide may be involved in the pathogenesis of KD, supporting the thesis that KD may have an infectious and/or postinfectious etiology (36). The etiological agent of KD is unknown, but a microbial cause remains possible. Collectively, it can be hypothesized that infection with a microbial agent(s) increases secretion of cytokines and chemokines, which leads to inflammation, and may be responsible for the observed increased levels of pro-MMP-9. Since pro-MMP-9 is secreted in the inactive form complexed to TIMP-1 (40), the markedly higher TIMP-1 protein levels during the acute phase of KD, compared to the convalescent phase, as well as in febrile non-KD patients, was not unexpected. This result is similar to the data reported by Matsuyama and Senzeki et al., where both groups found greater amounts of TIMP-1 in the acute phase of KD than in the convalescent phase and in healthy children (16, 32). Moreover, febrile non-KD patients with extremely high pro-MMP-9 levels also had elevated TIMP-1 levels. Thus, increased pro-MMP-9 protein levels result in concomitant elevations of TIMP-1 protein levels in the blood. The TIMP-1 ELISA kit detects TIMP-1 protein complexed to MMP-1, MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-9 but does not detect TIMP-2. This may explain the low but statistically significant coefficient of correlation between pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1.
TIMP-1 is the natural inhibitor of metalloproteinase activities. With progression of liver disease to liver fibrosis, a time when degradation of extracellular matrices are being terminated, TIMP-1 protein levels are increased (22). Therefore, the increased number of KD patients with higher TIMP-1 protein levels during convalescence is suggestive of decreased pro-MMP-9 enzymatic activities and recovery from vasculitis. Moreover, elevated TIMP-1 levels during the convalescent phase of KD help to explain the lack of correlation between TIMP-1 and pro-MMP-9.
MMP-2, unlike MMP-9, is constitutively expressed by many cells, is ubiquitously distributed, is not affected by inflammation, and is usually found complexed to TIMP-2. In our study population, pro-MMP-2 enzyme levels were not significantly different between the KD patients (acute and convalescent phases) and febrile and afebrile non-KD patients, with the exception that a significant difference was found between acute-phase levels of pro-MMP-2 in complete-KD patients and febrile patients. This difference could possibly be due to inhibition of pro-MMP-2 by TIMP-2 in febrile patients. Also, Senzaki et al. (32) reported that the MMP-2 level is elevated in the convalescent phase after IVIG administration and also higher in KD patients than in afebrile patients. The difference between their results and ours could be due to the difference between the assays used, in that the sandwich ELISA used by Senzaki et al. (32) could have detected both MMP-2 and MMP-2 complexed with TIMP-2, whereas zymography would have just picked up pro-MMP-2.
Our study population of incomplete-KD patients was small, and this could help explain the lack of correlation between pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1 protein levels in the acute phase and perhaps explain the statistically significant difference in active MMP-9 levels between incomplete-KD patients and afebrile controls. However, the small sample size does not discount our findings that incomplete-KD patients have elevated levels of both pro-MMP-9 enzyme and pro-MMP-9 protein, as well as TIMP-1 protein, during the acute phase of illness. Compared to febrile and afebrile non-KD patients, patients with incomplete KD still had higher pro-MMP-9 and TIMP-1 protein levels. Overall, we measured MMP-9 protein and enzyme levels by ELISA and zymography, respectively. Takeshita et al. measured MMP-9 mRNA levels by RT-PCR and MMP-9 levels by ELISA, and Senzaki et al. and Sekiguchi et al. measured MMP-9 levels by ELISA (31, 32, 35). All three groups independently demonstrated elevated levels of MMP-9 in the acute phase of KD compared to the convalescent phase or controls. This, coupled with the significant correlation between pro-MMP-9 protein levels and pro-MMP-9 enzyme activity during the acute phase of complete and incomplete KD, strongly suggests that MMP-9 plays a important role in the pathogenesis of KD and is an inflammatory marker for KD.
Polymorphism in the MMP-9 gene promoter has also been reported among intracranial aneurysm and myocardial infarction patients (25, 44). Furthermore, polymorphisms in the MMP-3 promoter and the gene for TIMP-1, but not the gene for MMP-9, have been reported to be associated with abdominal aortic aneurysm (39, 42). A few patients in our KD study population had extremely high pro-MMP-9 enzyme or pro-MMP-9 protein levels. It is tempting to speculate that these patients may have a specific polymorphism in the gene for MMP-9 that resulted in overproduction of pro-MMP-9. Alternatively, these patients may have elevated levels of other cytokines that could have elicited overproduction of pro-MMP-9. We also noticed that KD patients who had extremely high levels of pro-MMP-9 did not necessarily experience CAA or TDCA. This implies that other factors and/or molecules other than MMP-9 may be synergistically involved in causing CAA or TDCA.
The histopathology of KD shows increased monocytes, macrophages, and immunoglobulin A-secreting plasma cells at sites of vascular lesions (28), with ruptured internal elastic lamina, intimal hypertrophy, and degeneration of the basement membrane. More recently, Gavin et al., using immunochemical analysis of MMP-2 and MMP-9 in paraffin-embedded, formalin-fixed coronary artery tissue from 11 fatal acute KD cases, demonstrated significant differences in the expression of MMP-9 in KD CAA (7). Moreover, they demonstrated high expression of MMP-9 in mononuclear inflammatory cells in CAA compared to that in nonaneurysmal KD coronary arteries or in control arteries (7). Available data, therefore, strongly suggest a pathophysiological process by which MMP-9 may cause coronary aneurysms in KD patients. Furthermore, since TIMP-1 is the natural inhibitor of MMP-9, it is tempting to suggest the possibility of using TIMP-1 as a therapeutic approach in treating KD patients to prevent coronary aneurysms.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by grants from the Research Centers
in Minority Institutions Program, National Center for Research
Resources, National Institutes of Health (G12RR-003061 and P20RR11091);
the American Heart Association (9960338Z); and the Hawaii Community
Foundation (990565).
We thank Tiiu Talva for assistance in collecting patient information and the KMCWC nursing staff for assistance in blood sample collection. We thank Joanne Mor of the Clinical Research Center for assistance with the statistical analysis.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Retrovirology Research Laboratory, Leahi Hospital, 3675 Kilauea Ave., Honolulu, HI 96816. Phone: (808) 732-7702. Fax: (808) 735-3682. E-mail:
nerurkar{at}pbrc.hawaii.edu.


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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2003, p. 308-314, Vol. 10, No. 2
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.2.308-314.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.