Your immune system has a specialized strike force: cells whose sole job is to find and destroy anything that does not belong in your body, from a virus-infected cell to an early cancer cell. The absolute CD8+ T cell count tells you how many of these killers are circulating in your blood right now. If that number drops too low, your body loses a layer of protection you cannot feel missing until an infection takes hold or a scan reveals something unexpected.
Unlike a standard complete blood count, which lumps all white blood cells together, this test isolates the specific subset that does the hands-on work of cytotoxic immunity. It is most commonly ordered alongside HIV monitoring, transplant follow-up, or immunotherapy tracking, but it also offers a window into immune resilience for anyone curious about how well their defenses are holding up with age, stress, or chronic illness.
CD8 is the name of a protein sitting on the surface of a particular type of white blood cell. When your body detects a cell that has been hijacked by a virus or has started behaving abnormally (as cancer cells do), CD8+ T cells lock onto that cell and trigger its destruction. They are sometimes called cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), meaning "cell-killing lymphocytes."
These cells are produced in the thymus, a small gland behind your breastbone, and then circulate through your blood and tissues looking for trouble. The absolute count on your lab report tells you how many of these cells are present per microliter of blood. It does not tell you how well each cell functions or whether they are in the right tissues, but the count provides a strong baseline signal about your immune capacity.
The clearest evidence linking low CD8+ counts to poor outcomes comes from acute infectious disease. In a study of over 1,000 hospitalized COVID-19 patients, those with a CD8+ count below 165 cells per microliter, combined with elevated inflammation markers, had a dramatically higher risk of dying in the hospital. Across multiple COVID-19 cohorts, lower CD8+ counts at admission consistently predicted worse outcomes, including the need for intensive care and mechanical ventilation.
The pattern extends beyond COVID-19. In a study of 218 ICU patients, low total T cell counts (including CD8+) at admission, and failure of those counts to recover within 48 hours, predicted higher mortality. Septic shock, one of the most dangerous forms of overwhelming infection, is characterized by rapid, apoptosis-driven destruction of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells.
What this means for you: if you are recovering from a serious illness and your CD8+ count remains depressed weeks later, it is worth investigating whether your immune system has fully rebounded. Persistent lymphopenia (an abnormally low lymphocyte count) after hospitalization is common and carries its own risks.
In people living with HIV, CD8+ counts carry a more nuanced message than in the general population. HIV infection typically drives CD8+ counts upward as the immune system mounts an ongoing, exhausting fight against the virus. In a large Danish cohort of over 5,100 HIV-positive individuals, CD8+ counts were elevated throughout infection and often remained elevated for years despite effective antiretroviral therapy (ART, the standard drug regimen for HIV).
The twist: in this population, both very low CD8+ counts (below roughly 500 cells per microliter) and very high counts (above approximately 1,500 cells per microliter) were associated with increased mortality, but from different causes. Low counts predicted deaths from AIDS-related infections, while persistently high counts predicted deaths from non-AIDS causes such as cardiovascular disease and cancer. A meta-analysis of over 5,100 people on suppressive ART confirmed that high CD8+ counts at the two-year mark predicted a higher risk of clinical events going forward.
This is not a simple "higher is better" or "lower is worse" marker. In HIV, a persistently elevated CD8+ count signals chronic immune activation, a state where the immune system is running hot but not efficiently, which itself damages blood vessels and organs over time. The CD4/CD8 ratio (how your helper T cells compare to your cytotoxic T cells) adds context that the CD8+ count alone cannot provide.
Emerging evidence connects CD8+ T cells to heart and vascular health beyond the HIV context. In a population-based study of 700 adults, higher levels of CD8+ T cells were associated with increased risk of coronary events (heart attacks) and narrowing of the carotid arteries. A separate study in over 73,000 veterans (both HIV-positive and negative) found that high CD8+ counts in HIV-infected individuals were independently linked to a higher rate of heart attacks, adding predictive information beyond what CD4+ counts alone provided.
These findings suggest that CD8+ T cells may play an active role in the arterial inflammation that drives atherosclerosis, not just serve as passive bystanders. If your count is persistently elevated without an obvious infection, it may be worth pairing this result with cardiovascular risk markers like hs-CRP (high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, a measure of systemic inflammation) and ApoB (apolipoprotein B, a measure of cholesterol-carrying particles).
Much of the cancer research on CD8+ cells focuses on tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), which are the CD8+ cells that have migrated into a tumor, not the ones circulating in your blood. This is a different measurement than what a blood test captures, and the distinction matters. A meta-analysis of breast cancer studies found that high CD8+ TIL density was associated with better overall survival and disease-free survival. Similar patterns appear in pancreatic cancer, esophageal cancer, and head and neck cancers.
For blood-based CD8+ counts and cancer, the picture is less clear. A large meta-analysis found that high CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes predicted better outcomes from immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy, but circulating CD8+ counts did not show the same consistent relationship. In melanoma patients treated with ipilimumab (a type of immunotherapy drug), rising absolute CD8+ counts in the blood after treatment did correlate with improved survival, but this was a treatment-monitoring signal, not a screening tool.
The practical takeaway: your blood CD8+ count reflects overall immune capacity, but it does not directly tell you what is happening inside a specific tumor. If you are undergoing immunotherapy, serial CD8+ counts can help track whether your immune system is responding to treatment.
CD8+ T cell counts vary significantly by age, sex, and ethnicity, and there is no single universal reference range. The ranges below are drawn from published cohort data using flow cytometry on whole blood. Your lab may report slightly different numbers depending on the specific assay and population norms it uses.
| Population | Typical Range (cells/µL) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Healthy Indian adults | 218 to 1,396 (95% confidence interval) | Uppal et al. |
| Healthy Tanzanian adults | 462 to 548 (95% CI around mean of 505) | Ngowi et al. |
| HIV-negative Copenhagen background population | Upper 95th percentile approximately 835 | Helleberg et al. |
General patterns: females tend to have slightly lower CD8+ counts and higher CD4/CD8 ratios than males. Counts are highest in infancy and decline gradually through adulthood, with a shift from youthful "naive" CD8+ cells toward "memory" cells that have already seen a pathogen. These age and sex effects mean that the same number can carry different significance depending on who you are.
In HIV-specific research, clinicians often use rough tiers: below 500 cells/µL (associated with higher infection risk), 500 to 1,499 (a broad middle range), and above 1,500 (associated with chronic immune activation and non-infectious complications). These cutpoints come from HIV cohort data and should not be applied directly to the general population without caution.
CD8+ counts have high biological variability. In a study tracking immune biomarkers monthly for a full year in people with type 1 diabetes and healthy controls, the average coefficient of variation (a measure of how much a value bounces around from test to test) was approximately 50%. That means your count can swing substantially from one draw to the next without any real change in your health.
Given the roughly 50% intra-individual variability documented in serial testing, a single CD8+ count is a snapshot that may be noisy. The value of this test multiplies when you track it over time. A downward trend over three or four readings, even if each individual number is still within the reference range, tells a more meaningful story than any single value.
Research modeling suggests that averaging results across at least three separate visits substantially reduces the noise and makes it far easier to detect a real 50% change in your count. If you are getting a baseline, plan to retest in three to six months and then at least annually. If you are monitoring a known condition (HIV, post-transplant, autoimmune disease) or tracking the effect of an intervention, your physician may recommend more frequent draws.
Always compare results from the same lab using the same flow cytometry panel. Switching labs or assay platforms between readings introduces technical variability on top of biological variability, making trends harder to interpret.
If your CD8+ count comes back outside the expected range, the first step is context. Were you recently ill, stressed, or recovering from surgery? Were you taking corticosteroids or any immunomodulating medication? If so, retest in four to six weeks under baseline conditions before drawing conclusions.
A persistently low CD8+ count (confirmed on at least two draws separated by several weeks) warrants further investigation. Order a full lymphocyte subset panel including CD4+ T cells, the CD4/CD8 ratio, B cells, and NK (natural killer) cells. If the depression is isolated to CD8+ cells, consider testing for chronic viral infections (HIV, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus) and checking kidney function, since advanced chronic kidney disease is associated with lower CD8+ subset counts across naive, memory, and effector cell types.
A persistently elevated CD8+ count, especially with a low CD4/CD8 ratio, may signal chronic immune activation. In someone not living with HIV, this pattern can accompany chronic viral infections, autoimmune conditions, or sustained inflammatory stress. Pair the result with hs-CRP and consider referral to an immunologist if the elevation persists without an obvious cause.
Evidence-backed interventions that affect your Abs CD8 level
Abs CD8+ is best interpreted alongside these tests.