International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Nov 2023)

Impact of very early antiretroviral therapy during acute HIV infection on long-term immunovirological outcomes

  • Paula Suanzes,
  • Jordi Navarro,
  • Ariadna Rando-Segura,
  • Patricia Álvarez-López,
  • Jorge García,
  • Vicente Descalzo,
  • Arnau Monforte,
  • Maider Arando,
  • Lucía Rodríguez,
  • Bibiana Planas,
  • Joaquín Burgos,
  • Adrian Curran,
  • María José Buzón,
  • Vicenç Falcó

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 136
pp. 100 – 106

Abstract

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Objectives: We aimed to determine if starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) in the first 30 days after acquiring HIV infection has an impact on immunovirological response. Methods: Observational, ambispective study including 147 patients with confirmed acute HIV infection (January/1995-August/2022). ART was defined as very early (≤30 days after the estimated date of infection), early (31-180 days), and late (>180 days). We compared time to viral suppression (viral load [VL] <50 copies/ml) and immune recovery (IR) (CD4+/CD8+ ratio ≥1) according to the timing and type of ART using survival analysis. Results: ART was started in 140 (95.2%) patients. ART was very early in 24 (17.1%), early in 77 (55.0%), and late in 39 (27.9%) cases. Integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI)-based regimens were the most used in both the overall population (65%) and the very early ART group (23/24, 95.8%). Median HIV VL and CD4+/CD8+ ratio pre-ART were higher in the very early ART group (P <0.05). Patients in the very early and early ART groups and treated with INSTI-based regimens achieved IR earlier (P <0.05). Factors associated with faster IR were the CD4+/CD8+ ratio pre-ART (hazard ratio: 9.3, 95% CI: 3.1-27.8, P <0.001) and INSTI-based regimens (hazard ratio: 2.4, 95% CI: 1.3-4.2, P = 0.003). Conclusions: The strongest predictors of IR in patients who start ART during AHI are the CD4+/CD8+ ratio pre-ART and INSTI-based ART regimens.

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