PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Clinical predictors of immune reconstitution following combination antiretroviral therapy in patients from the Australian HIV Observational Database.

  • Reena Rajasuriar,
  • Maelenn Gouillou,
  • Tim Spelman,
  • Tim Read,
  • Jennifer Hoy,
  • Matthew Law,
  • Paul U Cameron,
  • Kathy Petoumenos,
  • Sharon R Lewin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0020713
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
p. e20713

Abstract

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A small but significant number of patients do not achieve CD4 T-cell counts >500 cells/µl despite years of suppressive cART. These patients remain at risk of AIDS and non-AIDS defining illnesses. The aim of this study was to identify clinical factors associated with CD4 T-cell recovery following long-term cART.Patients with the following inclusion criteria were selected from the Australian HIV Observational Database (AHOD): cART as their first regimen initiated at CD4 T-cell count 500 cells/µl and >200 cells/µl.501 patients were eligible for inclusion from AHOD (n = 2853). The median (IQR) age and baseline CD4 T-cell counts were 39 (32-47) years and 236 (130-350) cells/µl, respectively. A major strength of this study is the long follow-up duration, median (IQR) = 6.5(3-10) years. Most patients (80%) achieved CD4 T-cell counts >500 cells/µl, but in 8%, this took >5 years. Among the patients who failed to reach a CD4 T-cell count >500 cells/µl, 16% received cART for >10 years. In a multivariate analysis, faster time to achieve a CD4 T-cell count >500 cells/µl was associated with higher baseline CD4 T-cell counts (p200 cells/µl included higher baseline CD4 T-cell count (p500 cells/µl despite long-term cART is prolonged in a subset of patients in AHOD. Starting cART early with a PI-based regimen (vs. NNRTI-based regimen) is associated with more rapid recovery of a CD4 T-cell count >500 cells/µl.