BMC Medicine (Nov 2020)

Risk scores for predicting early antiretroviral therapy mortality in sub-Saharan Africa to inform who needs intensification of care: a derivation and external validation cohort study

  • Andrew F. Auld,
  • Katherine Fielding,
  • Tefera Agizew,
  • Alice Maida,
  • Anikie Mathoma,
  • Rosanna Boyd,
  • Anand Date,
  • Sherri L. Pals,
  • George Bicego,
  • Yuliang Liu,
  • Ray W. Shiraishi,
  • Peter Ehrenkranz,
  • Christopher Serumola,
  • Unami Mathebula,
  • Heather Alexander,
  • Salome Charalambous,
  • Courtney Emerson,
  • Goabaone Rankgoane-Pono,
  • Pontsho Pono,
  • Alyssa Finlay,
  • James C. Shepherd,
  • Charles Holmes,
  • Tedd V. Ellerbrock,
  • Alison D. Grant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-020-01775-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Clinical scores to determine early (6-month) antiretroviral therapy (ART) mortality risk have not been developed for sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), home to 70% of people living with HIV. In the absence of validated scores, WHO eligibility criteria (EC) for ART care intensification are CD4 37.5 °C (2 points). The same variables plus CD4 < 200/μL (1 point) were included in the CD4-dependent score. Among XPRES enrollees, a CD4-independent score of ≥ 4 would provide 86% sensitivity and 66% specificity, whereas WHO EC would provide 83% sensitivity and 58% specificity. If WHO stage alone was used, sensitivity was 48% and specificity 89%. Among TBFT enrollees, the CD4-independent score of ≥ 4 would provide 95% sensitivity and 27% specificity, whereas WHO EC would provide 100% sensitivity but 0% specificity. Accuracy was similar between CD4-independent and CD4-dependent scores. Categorizing CD4-independent scores into low (< 4), moderate (4–6), and high risk (≥ 7) gave 6-month mortality of 1%, 4%, and 17% for XPRES and 1%, 5%, and 30% for TBFT enrollees. Conclusions Sensitivity of the CD4-independent score was nearly twice that of WHO stage in predicting 6-month mortality and could be used in settings lacking CD4 testing to inform ART care intensification. The CD4-dependent score improved specificity versus WHO EC. Both scores should be considered for scale-up in SSA.

Keywords