| Literature DB >> 22544202 |
Nitin K Hingankar1, Smita R Thorat, Alaka Deshpande, S Rajasekaran, C Chandrasekar, Suria Kumar, Padmini Srikantiah, Devidas N Chaturbhuj, Sharda R Datkar, Pravin S Deshmukh, Smita S Kulkarni, Suvarna Sane, D C S Reddy, Renu Garg, Michael R Jordan, Sandhya Kabra, Srikanth P Tripathy, Ramesh S Paranjape.
Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus drug resistance (HIVDR) in cohorts of patients initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART) at clinics in Chennai and Mumbai, India, was assessed following World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines. Twelve months after ART initiation, 75% and 64.6% of participants at the Chennai and Mumbai clinics, respectively, achieved viral load suppression of <1000 copies/mL (HIVDR prevention). HIVDR at initiation of ART (P <.05) and 12-month CD4 cell counts <200 cells/μL (P <.05) were associated with HIVDR at 12 months. HIVDR prevention exceeded WHO guidelines (≥ 70%) at the Chennai clinic but was below the target in Mumbai due to high rates of loss to follow-up. Findings highlight the need for defaulter tracing and scale-up of routine viral load testing to identify patients failing first-line ART.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22544202 PMCID: PMC3338312 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cis005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079