Andrew Mujugira1, Jared Baeten2, Lara Kidoguchi3, Jessica Haberer4, Connie Celum5, Deborah Donnell6, Kenneth Ngure7, Elizabeth Bukusi8, Nelly Mugo9, Stephen Asiimwe10, Josephine Odoyo11, Edna Tindimwebwa12, Nulu Bulya13, Elly Katabira14, Renee Heffron15. 1. University of Washington, Department of Global Health , 901 Boren Ave , Suite 1300 , Seattle, Washington, United States , 98104 ; mujugira@uw.edu. 2. Seattle, United States ; jbaeten@uw.edu. 3. Seattle, United States ; larakid@uw.edu. 4. Boston, United States ; jhaberer@partners.org. 5. Seattle, Washington, United States ; ccelum@uw.edu. 6. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, SCHARP/VIDI/PHS , 1100 Fairview Ave N , Seattle, Washington, United States , 98109 ; deborah@scharp.org. 7. Narobi, Kenya ; k_ngure@hotmail.com. 8. Kenya Medical Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya ; ebukusi@kemri.org. 9. Kenya Medical Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya ; rwamba@uw.edu. 10. Kampala, Uganda ; asiimwes@kcrc.or.ug. 11. Kisumu, Kenya ; orajose@kemri-ucsf.org. 12. Kabwohe, Uganda ; tedna@kcrc.or.ug. 13. Kampala, Uganda ; nbulya@yahoo.com. 14. Makerere University, Infectious Disease Institute, Kampala, Uganda ; katabira@imul.com. 15. University of Washington, Department of Epidemiology, Seattle, United States ; rheffron@uw.edu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People who are asymptomatic and feel healthy, including pregnant women, may be less motivated to initiate ART or achieve high adherence. We assessed whether ART initiation, and viral suppression 6, 12 and 24-months after ART initiation, were lower in HIV-infected members of serodiscordant couples who initiated during pregnancy or with higher CD4 counts. METHODS: We used data from the Partners Demonstration Project, an open-label study of the delivery of integrated PrEP and ART (at any CD4 count) for HIV prevention among high-risk HIV serodiscordant couples in Kenya and Uganda. Differences in viral suppression (HIV RNA <400 copies/ml) among people initiating ART at different CD4 count levels (≤350, 351-500, and >500 cells/mm3) and during pregnancy were estimated using Poisson regression. RESULTS: Of 865 HIV-infected participants retained after becoming eligible for ART during study follow-up, 95% initiated ART. Viral suppression 24-months after ART initiation was high overall (97%), and comparable among those initiating ART at CD4 counts >500, 351-500 and ≤350 cells/mm3 (96% vs 97% vs 97%; relative risk [RR] 0.98; 95% CI: 0.93-1.03 for CD4 >500 vs <350 and RR 0.99; 95% CI: (0.93-1.06) for CD4 351-500 vs ≤350). Viral suppression was as likely among women initiating ART primarily to prevent perinatal transmission as ART initiation for other reasons (p=0.9 at 6 months and p=0.5 at 12 months). CONCLUSIONS: Nearly all HIV-infected partners initiating ART were virally suppressed by 24 months, irrespective of CD4 count or pregnancy status. These findings suggest that people initiating ART at high CD4 counts or due to pregnancy can adhere to ART as well as those starting treatment with symptomatic HIV disease or low CD4 counts.
BACKGROUND:People who are asymptomatic and feel healthy, including pregnant women, may be less motivated to initiate ART or achieve high adherence. We assessed whether ART initiation, and viral suppression 6, 12 and 24-months after ART initiation, were lower in HIV-infected members of serodiscordant couples who initiated during pregnancy or with higher CD4 counts. METHODS: We used data from the Partners Demonstration Project, an open-label study of the delivery of integrated PrEP and ART (at any CD4 count) for HIV prevention among high-risk HIV serodiscordant couples in Kenya and Uganda. Differences in viral suppression (HIV RNA <400 copies/ml) among people initiating ART at different CD4 count levels (≤350, 351-500, and >500 cells/mm3) and during pregnancy were estimated using Poisson regression. RESULTS: Of 865 HIV-infectedparticipants retained after becoming eligible for ART during study follow-up, 95% initiated ART. Viral suppression 24-months after ART initiation was high overall (97%), and comparable among those initiating ART at CD4 counts >500, 351-500 and ≤350 cells/mm3 (96% vs 97% vs 97%; relative risk [RR] 0.98; 95% CI: 0.93-1.03 for CD4 >500 vs <350 and RR 0.99; 95% CI: (0.93-1.06) for CD4 351-500 vs ≤350). Viral suppression was as likely among women initiating ART primarily to prevent perinatal transmission as ART initiation for other reasons (p=0.9 at 6 months and p=0.5 at 12 months). CONCLUSIONS: Nearly all HIV-infected partners initiating ART were virally suppressed by 24 months, irrespective of CD4 count or pregnancy status. These findings suggest that people initiating ART at high CD4 counts or due to pregnancy can adhere to ART as well as those starting treatment with symptomatic HIV disease or low CD4 counts.
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