PLoS ONE (Dec 2006)

Clinical outcome of HIV-infected patients with sustained virologic response to antiretroviral therapy: long-term follow-up of a multicenter cohort.

  • Félix Gutierrez,
  • Sergio Padilla,
  • Mar Masiá,
  • José A Iribarren,
  • Santiago Moreno,
  • Pompeyo Viciana,
  • Leopoldo Muñoz,
  • José L Gómez Sirvent,
  • Francesc Vidal,
  • José López-Aldeguer,
  • José R Blanco,
  • Manuel Leal,
  • María Angeles Rodríguez-Arenas,
  • Santiago Perez Hoyos,
  • CoRIS-MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000089
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
p. e89

Abstract

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BackgroundLimited information exists on long-term prognosis of patients with sustained virologic response to antiretroviral therapy. We aimed to assess predictors of unfavorable clinical outcome in patients who maintain viral suppression with HAART.MethodsUsing data collected from ten clinic-based cohorts in Spain, we selected all antiretroviral-naive adults who initiated HAART and maintained plasma HIV-1 RNA levels ResultsOf 2,613 patients who started HAART, 757 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. 61% of them initiated a protease inhibitor-based HAART regimen, 29.7% a nonnucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitor-based regimen, and 7.8% a triple-nucleoside regimen. During 2,556 person-years of follow-up, 22 (2.9%) patients died (mortality rate 0.86 per 100 person-years), and 40 (5.3%) died or developed a new AIDS-defining event. The most common causes of death were neoplasias and liver failure. Mortality was independently associated with a CD4-T cell response ConclusionsPatients with sustained virologic response on HAART have a low mortality rate over time. Long-term outcome of these patients is driven by immunologic response at the end of the first year of therapy and age at the time of HAART initiation, but not by the initial antiretroviral regimen selected.