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Immune system

CD4/CD8 ratio

DECD4/CD8-Quotient

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The CD4/CD8 ratio is the proportion of CD4+ helper T cells to CD8+ cytotoxic T cells in peripheral blood, with a healthy reference range typically cited as approximately 1.5–2.5. In young, immunocompetent adults, CD4+ cells predominate and coordinate adaptive responses, whereas CD8+ cells patrol for infected or transformed cells. With age — particularly in CMV-seropositive individuals — oligoclonal CD8+ expansions accumulate, compressing the ratio and sometimes inverting it below 1.0, a pattern associated with frailty, poor vaccine responses, and increased all-cause mortality in elderly cohorts and in studies of HIV-positive individuals. An inverted CD4/CD8 ratio is increasingly used as a component of immune-risk profiling in the context of immunosenescence.

Sources

  1. Nikolich-Žugich J. (2018). The twilight of immunity: emerging concepts in aging of the immune system. *Nature Immunology*doi:10.1038/s41590-017-0006-x
  2. Pawelec G. (2012). Hallmarks of human 'immunosenescence': adaptation or dysregulation?. *Immunity and Ageing*doi:10.1186/1742-4933-9-15