6 Papers
43 Citations
Bing Su is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Viral load & Coinfection. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Association between Vγ2Vδ2 T Cells and Disease Progression after Infection with Closely Related Strains of HIV in China
Haishan Li,Hong Peng,Peng-fei Ma,Yuhua Ruan,Bing Su,Xin-Ping Ding,Chen Xu,C. David Pauza,Yiming Shao +8 more
TL;DR: The association of VGamma2Vdelta2 T cells with disease progression in 146 HIV-infected participants supports the view that intact Vgamma2 Vdelta 2 T cell populations are important for controlling HIV disease.
Epidemiology, clinical and laboratory characteristics of currently alive HIV-1 infected former blood donors naive to antiretroviral therapy in Anhui Province, China.
Jianqing Xu,Jian-Jun Wang,Li-Feng Han,Chen Xu,Yuhua Ruan,Zhen-Hou Xu,Xi Chen,Zhen-Dong Liu,Jun Wang,Bing Su,Xin-Ping Ding,Bing Gao,Yong-Bin Gu,Xiao-Yun Cao,Hui Xing,Kunxue Hong,Hong Peng,Quan-bi Zhao,Lin Yuan,Yi Feng,Gui-Yun Zhang,Liying Ma,Lan Wu,Yiming Shao +23 more
TL;DR: Co‐infection with HCV but not HBV is highly prevalent among HIV‐1‐infected FBDs and CD4+ T‐cell counts is a reliable indicator for disease progression among FBDs.
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HCV coinfection associated with slower disease progression in HIV-infected former plasma donors naïve to ART.
Xiaoyan Zhang,Jianqing Xu,Jianqing Xu,Hong Peng,Yan Ma,Li-Feng Han,Yuhua Ruan,Bing Su,Ning Wang,Yiming Shao +9 more
TL;DR: HCV coinfection with HIV-1 is associated with the slower disease progression at the very late stage when comparing with HIV/HCV mono-infection, indicated by data indicated.
Frequency of HLA-A*03 associates with HIV-1 infection in a Chinese cohort
Weilun Zhang,Li Wang,KunXue Hong,Yanxin Liu,Bing Su,Cheng Xu,JianQin Xu,Yuhua Ruan,YiMin Shao,Dexian Zheng +9 more
TL;DR: Novel evidence is provided on HLA class I allele distribution and association of HLA-A*03 frequency with HIV-1 infection and viremia in theAIDS-1 infected FBDs, which may throw light on intervention strategy for the HIV- 1 infection and understanding how host immunity and genetic background affect HIV infection and AIDS progression is understood.
•Journal Article
[Effect of GBV-C/HIV coinfection on HIV/AIDS disease progression and HIV replication].
Ting Zhu,Xin-Ping Ding,Yanmin Wan,Lianxing Liu,Hong Peng,Xianggang Huang,Yan-Meng Feng,Chao Wu,Yuhua Ruan,Li-Feng Han,Hui Xing,Jian-Jun Wang,Bing Su,Chen Xu,Jianqing Xu,Yiming Shao +15 more
TL;DR: GBV-C coinfection with HIV-1 does not significantly influence HIV/AIDS disease progression during the late stage of chronic HIV-2 infection, and the influence of therapy on AIDS disease progression was ruled out in this study.
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