Literature DB >> 19209067

Failure of immunologic criteria to appropriately identify antiretroviral treatment failure in Uganda.

Steven J Reynolds1, Gertrude Nakigozi, Kevin Newell, Anthony Ndyanabo, Ronald Galiwongo, Iga Boaz, Thomas C Quinn, Ron Gray, Maria Wawer, David Serwadda.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Most antiretroviral treatment program in resource-limited settings use immunologic or clinical monitoring to measure response to therapy and to decide when to change to a second-line regimen. Our objective was to evaluate immunologic failure criteria against gold standard virologic monitoring.
DESIGN: Observational cohort.
METHODS: Participants enrolled in an antiretroviral treatment program in rural Uganda who had at least 6 months of follow-up were included in this analysis. Immunologic monitoring was performed by CD4 cell counts every 3 months during the first year, and every 6 months thereafter. HIV-1 viral loads were performed every 6 months.
RESULTS: A total of 1133 participants enrolled in the Rakai Health Sciences Program antiretroviral treatment program between June 2004 and September 2007 were followed for up to 44.4 months (median follow-up 20.2 months; IQR 12.4-29.5 months). WHO immunologic failure criteria were reached by 125 (11.0%) participants. A virologic failure endpoint defined as HIV-1 viral load more than 400 copies/ml on two measurements was reached by 112 participants (9.9%). Only 26 participants (2.3%) experienced both an immunologic and virologic failure endpoint (2 viral load > 400 copies/ml) during follow-up.
CONCLUSION: Immunologic failure criteria performed poorly in our setting and would have resulted in a substantial proportion of participants with suppressed HIV-1 viral load being switched unnecessarily. These criteria also lacked sensitivity to identify participants failing virologically. Periodic viral load measurements may be a better marker for treatment failure in our setting.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19209067      PMCID: PMC2720562          DOI: 10.1097/QAD.0b013e3283262a78

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


  6 in total

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2.  Performance of immunologic responses in predicting viral load suppression: implications for monitoring patients in resource-limited settings.

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5.  Evaluation of the WHO criteria for antiretroviral treatment failure among adults in South Africa.

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  6 in total
  102 in total

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6.  HIV Viral Load Suppression in Adults and Children Receiving Antiretroviral Therapy-Results From the IeDEA Collaboration.

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10.  Monitoring virologic responses to antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected adults in Kenya: evaluation of a low-cost viral load assay.

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