With more people receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART),
the need to detect treatment failure and switch to second-line ART has also
increased. We assessed CD4 cell counts (as a marker of treatment failure),
determined the rate of switching to second-line treatment and evaluated
mortality related to treatment failure among HIV-infected patients in
Guinea-Bissau.
In this retrospective cohort study, adult patients infected
with HIV-1 receiving ≥6 months of ART at an HIV clinic in Bissau were included
from June 2005 to July 2014 and followed until January 2015. Treatment failure
was defined as 1) a fall in CD4 count to baseline (or below) or 2) CD4 levels
persistently below 100 cells/µL after ≥6 months of ART. Cox hazard models, with
time since six months of ART as the time-varying coefficient, were used to
estimate the hazard ratio for death and loss to follow-up.
We assessed 1,591 HIV-1-infected patients for immunological
treatment failure. Treatment failure could not be determined in 594 patients
(37.3%) because of missing CD4 cell counts. Among the remaining 997 patients,
393 (39.4%) experienced failure. Only 39 patients (9.9%) with failure were
switched from first- to second-line ART. The overall switching rate was 3.1 per
100 person-years. Mortality rate was higher in patients with than without
treatment failure, with adjusted hazard rate ratios (HRRs) 10.0 (95% CI:
0.9–107.8), 7.6 (95% CI: 1.6–35.5) and 3.1 (95% CI: 1.5–6.3) in the first,
second and following years, respectively. During the first year of follow-up,
patients experiencing treatment failure had a higher risk of being lost to
follow-up than patients not experiencing treatment failure (adjusted HRR 4.4;
95% CI: 1.7–11.8).
We found a high rate of treatment failure, an alarmingly
high number of patients for whom treatment failure could not be assessed, and a
low rate of switching to a second-line therapy. These factors could lead to an
increased risk of resistance development and excess mortality.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/U41wQs
By: Sanne Jespersen,§,1 Bo Langhoff Hønge,1 Candida Medina, David da Silva Té, Faustino Gomes Correira, Alex Lund Laursen, Christian Erikstrup, Lars Østergaard, Christian Wejse,1 and for the Bissau HIV Cohort study group*
1Bandim Health Project, Indepth Network, Bissau, Guinea-Bissau
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