Durability and outcome of initial antiretroviral treatments received during 2000--2005 by patients in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study.


Autoria(s): Vo T.T.; Ledergerber B.; Keiser O.; Hirschel B.; Furrer H.; Battegay M.; Cavassini M.; Bernasconi E.; Vernazza P.; Weber R.; Swiss HIV Cohort Study
Data(s)

01/06/2008

Resumo

BACKGROUND: Little is known about time trends, predictors, and consequences of changes made to antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimens early after patients initially start treatment. METHODS: We compared the incidence of, reasons for, and predictors of treatment change within 1 year after starting combination ART (cART), as well as virological and immunological outcomes at 1 year, among 1866 patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study who initiated cART during 2000--2001, 2002--2003, or 2004--2005. RESULTS: The durability of initial regimens did not improve over time (P = .15): 48.8% of 625 patients during 2000--2001, 43.8% of 607 during 2002--2003, and 44.3% of 634 during 2004--2005 changed cART within 1 year; reasons for change included intolerance (51.1% of all patients), patient wish (15.4%), physician decision (14.8%), and virological failure (7.1%). An increased probability of treatment change was associated with larger CD4+ cell counts, larger human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RNA loads, and receipt of regimens that contained stavudine or indinavir/ritonavir, but a decreased probability was associated with receipt of regimens that contained tenofovir. Treatment discontinuation was associated with larger CD4+ cell counts, current use of injection drugs, and receipt of regimens that contained nevirapine. One-year outcomes improved between 2000--2001 and 2004--2005: 84.5% and 92.7% of patients, respectively, reached HIV-1 RNA loads of <50 copies/mL and achieved median increases in CD4+ cell counts of 157.5 and 197.5 cells/microL, respectively (P < .001 for all comparisons). CONCLUSIONS: Virological and immunological outcomes of initial treatments improved between 2000--2001 and 2004--2005, irrespective of uniformly high rates of early changes in treatment across the 3 study intervals.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_C3F7BBB5F713

isbn:0022-1899 (Print)

pmid:18513155

doi:10.1086/588141

isiid:000256315300008

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of Infectious Diseases, vol. 197, no. 12, pp. 1685-1694

Palavras-Chave #Adult; Anti-HIV Agents/administration & dosage; Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use; Cohort Studies; Drug Administration Schedule; Female; HIV Infections/complications; HIV Infections/drug therapy; Hepatitis B/complications; Hepatitis C/complications; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Switzerland; Time Factors; Treatment Outcome
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article