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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Influence of lifelong cumulative HIV viremia on long-term recovery of CD4+ cell count and CD4+/CD8+ ratio among patients on combination antiretroviral therapy
Laurence MeyerLionel PirothMatthieu SaadaSylvie OrrChristine RouziouxEvguenia KrastinovaRémonie SengJean-michel MolinaCécile GoujardPatrick Miailhessubject
AdultCD4-Positive T-LymphocytesMalePercentilemedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsImmunologyCD4-CD8 RatioHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)CD4-CD8 RatioHIV InfectionsViremiaCD8-Positive T-Lymphocytesmedicine.disease_causeLogistic regressionMedication AdherenceCohort StudiesAntiretroviral Therapy Highly ActiveInternal medicineSecondary PreventionmedicineHumansImmunology and AllergyLongitudinal StudiesProspective StudiesViremiaCd4 cell countbusiness.industrymedicine.diseaseAntiretroviral therapyCD4 Lymphocyte CountInfectious DiseasesAnti-Retroviral AgentsCohortImmunologyFemalebusinessdescription
OBJECTIVE We explored the impact of lifelong cumulative HIV viremia on immunological recovery during antiretroviral therapy, according to the timing of treatment initiation. METHODS We estimated lifelong cumulative HIV viremia in patients followed in the ANRS PRIMO cohort since primary infection, including 244 patients who started treatment during PHI and had at least one treatment interruption, and 218 patients who started treatment later but with no interruptions. The impact of cumulative viremia on current immunological status was analysed using linear and logistic regression models. RESULTS At the last visit on treatment, median CD4 cell count was 645 cells/μl in the early/intermittent treatment group (median time from infection 9.5 years, 4.8 years of continuous treatment since last resumption), and 654 cells/μl in the deferred/continuous treatment group (median time from infection 6.1 years, 3.0 years of continuous treatment). Only 36.1 and 39.8% of patients achieved a CD4/CD8 ratio of more than 1, respectively. Current CD4 cell count was not associated with cumulative HIV viremia in either group. In contrast, patients with high cumulative HIV viremia (>66th percentile vs. <33rd percentile) were less likely to achieve a CD4/CD8 ratio of more than 1 (26.8 vs. 43.3%, P = 0.003), even after controlling for the baseline CD4/CD8 ratio, treatment duration, sex and age. Much higher CD4 cell count and CD4/CD8 ratio were reached in early/continuous treatment, that is low viremia exposure group. CONCLUSION Our results underline the critical need in early-treated patients to maintain adherence, in order to limit cumulative HIV viremia and optimize immunological recovery, notably the CD4/CD8 ratio.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-02-26 | AIDS |