| Literature DB >> 23251485 |
Elissa K Butler1, David R Boulware, Paul R Bohjanen, David B Meya.
Abstract
Data presented previously as an abstract at the 2011 CUGH Global Health Conference in Montreal, Canada on 15 Nov 2011. The long-term survival of HIV-infected persons with symptomatic cryptococcal meningitis and asymptomatic, subclinical cryptococcal antigenemia (CRAG+) is unknown. We prospectively enrolled 25 asymptomatic, antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naïve CRAG+ Ugandans with CD4<100 cells/mcL who received pre-emptive fluconazole treatment (CRAG+ cohort) and 189 ART-naïve Ugandans with symptomatic cryptococcal meningitis treated with amphotericin (CM cohort). The 10-week survival was 84% (95%CI: 70-98%) in the CRAG+ cohort and 57% (95%CI: 50%-64%) in the CM cohort. The CRAG+ cohort had improved five-year survival of 76% (95%CI: 59%-93%) compared to 42% (95%CI: 35%-50%) in the CM cohort (P = 0.001). The two cohorts had similar immunosuppression pre-ART with median CD4 counts of 15 vs. 21 CD4/mcL in the CRAG+ and CM cohorts, respectively (P = 0.45). Despite substantial early mortality, subsequent 5-year survival of persons surviving 6-months was excellent (>88%), demonstrating that long term survival is possible in resource-limited settings. Pre-ART CRAG screening with preemptive fluconazole treatment and improved CM treatment(s) are needed to reduce AIDS-attributable mortality due to cryptococcosis which remains 20-25% in sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23251485 PMCID: PMC3519582 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of persons presenting with asymptomatic, subclinical cryptococcal antigenemia (CRAG+) and symptomatic cryptococcal meningitis.
| Variable | Asymptomatic CRAG+(n = 25) | Cryptococcal Meningitis(n = 189) |
|
| Mean Age – years (±SD) | 35.7 (±7.2) | 36.2 (±8.8) | .75 |
| Male Sex – no. (%) | 11 (44%) | 107 (56%) | .29 |
| Mean BMI – kg/m2 (±SD) | 19.4 (±3.1) | 19.1 (±2.9) | .63 |
| WHO Clinical Stage of HIV/AIDS – no. (%) | <.001 | ||
| WHO Clinical Stage 3 | 15 (60%) | 0 (0%) | |
| WHO Clinical Stage 4 | 10 (40%) | 189(100%) | |
| Median Pre-ART CD4 count – cells/µL (IQR) | 15 (4–57) | 21 (8–42) | .45 |
| Median CD4 count at 6 months – cells/µL (IQR) | 146 (110–241) | 103 (67–159) | .001 |
| Median Pre-ART Viral Load – log10 copies/mL (IQR) | 5.8 (5.3–5.9) | 5.3 (4.8–5.7) | <.001 |
Pre-ART CD4 and viral load data were only available for 117 symptomatic CM persons, collected pre-ART.
Figure 1Long term survival among HIV-infected persons with cryptococcosis in Uganda.
The Kaplan-Meier survival curve displays the long term survival of 25 asymptomatic persons who tested positive for serum cryptococcal antigen (CRAG+) treated with fluconazole and ART compared to 189 symptomatic patients with cryptococcal meningitis (CM) treated with amphotericin B induction and then fluconazole consolidation therapy and then ART. Diamonds represent censored data. Persons were right-hand censored if they were still living at the time of analysis (n = 82), if they transferred their care to another clinic (n = 7), or if they were lost to follow up (n = 9). Survival table showing survival rate, number of deaths, number censored, and number of survivors at yearly intervals for each cohort.