Predictors of success with highly active antiretroviral therapy in an antiretroviral-naive urban population.

Journal: AIDS Research And Human Retroviruses
Published:
Abstract

Abstract Predictors of successful virologic, immunologic, and clinical response with combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) containing a boosted protease inhibitor or a nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor were analyzed among an antiretroviral naive (ARV-naive) urban cohort. Measures of success included virologic suppression [HIV-1 viral load (VL) <400 copies/ml], an increase in CD4(+) T cells from baseline of >100 cells/microl, and lack of development of an AIDS-defining illness at 24 and 48 weeks after cART initiation. Two hundred and eighty-seven ARV-naive patients were included in this cohort, of which 76.7% were male and 86.8% were nonwhite. At the time of cART initiation their median age was 39 years, the geometric mean CD4(+) count was 42 cells/microl, and the mean viral load was 5.3 log(10) copies/ml. At 48 weeks, 72% of patients achieved virologic suppression, with > or =90% adherence and high school graduation predicting viral undetectability at 48 weeks. Baseline VL < or =100,000 copies/ml and a CD4(+) cell count >100 cells/microl were associated with viral suppression at 24 weeks [OR (95% CI) = 3.55 (1.29-9.81) and 3.96 (1.19-13.15), respectively]; female gender was associated with a greater increase in CD4(+) cell counts [OR (95% CI) = 7.41 (2.48-22.1)]. CDC stage A1-C2 at baseline predicted lack of clinical progression at 48 weeks. The results of this analysis of an ARV-naive cohort comprised predominantly of indigent, minority patients suggest that men who did not have a high school education and who had advanced HIV infection are less likely to have therapeutic success after cART initiation.

Authors
Elisa Zaragoza Macias, Dominique Cosco, Minh Nguyen, Carlos Del Rio, Jeffrey Lennox
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS