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First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda

INTRODUCTION: The majority of studies from resource-limited settings only report short-term virological outcomes of patients on antiretroviral treatment (ART). We aim to describe the long-term durability of first-line ART and identify factors associated with long-term virological outcomes. METHODS:...

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Autores principales: Castelnuovo, Barbara, Kiragga, Agnes, Mubiru, Frank, Kambugu, Andrew, Kamya, Moses, Reynolds, Steven J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International AIDS Society 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4913145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27319742
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.1.20773
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author Castelnuovo, Barbara
Kiragga, Agnes
Mubiru, Frank
Kambugu, Andrew
Kamya, Moses
Reynolds, Steven J
author_facet Castelnuovo, Barbara
Kiragga, Agnes
Mubiru, Frank
Kambugu, Andrew
Kamya, Moses
Reynolds, Steven J
author_sort Castelnuovo, Barbara
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The majority of studies from resource-limited settings only report short-term virological outcomes of patients on antiretroviral treatment (ART). We aim to describe the long-term durability of first-line ART and identify factors associated with long-term virological outcomes. METHODS: At the Infectious Diseases Institute in Kampala, Uganda, 559 adult patients starting ART in 2004 were enrolled into a research cohort and monitored with viral load (VL) testing every six months for 10 years. We report the proportion and cumulative probability of 1) achieving virologic suppression (at least one VL <400 copies/ml); 2) experiencing virologic failure in patients who achieved suppression (two consecutive VLs >1000 copies/ml or one VL >5000, for those without a subsequent one); 3) treatment failure (not attaining virologic suppression or experiencing virologic failure). We used Cox regression methods to determine the characteristics associated with treatment failure. We included gender, baseline age, WHO stage, body mass index, CD4 count, propensity score for initial ART regimen, VL, time-dependent CD4 count and adherence. RESULTS: Of the 559 patients enrolled, 472 (84.8%) had at least one VL (67 died, 13 were lost to follow-up, 4 transferred, 2 had no VL available); 73.6% started on d4T/3TC/nevirapine and 26.4% on AZT/3TC/efavirenz. Patients in the two groups had similar characteristics, except for the higher proportion of patients in WHO Stage 3/4 and higher VL in the efavirenz-based group. Four hundred thirty-nine (93%) patients achieved virologic suppression with a cumulative probability of 0.94 (confidence interval (CI): 0.92–0.96); 74/439 (16.9%) experienced virologic failure with a cumulative probability of 0.18 (CI: 0.15–0.22). In the multivariate analysis, initial d4T/3TC/nevirapine regimen (hazard ratio (HR): 3.02; CI: 3.02 (1.66–5.44, p<0.001)) and baseline VL ≥5 log10 copies/ml (HR: 2.29; CI: 1.29–4.04) were associated with treatment failures; patients of older age (HR: 0.87 per five-year increase; CI: 0.77–0.99), with adherence >95% (HR: 0.04; CI: 0.02–0.11) and with higher time-dependent CD4 count (HR: 0.94 per 50 cells/µl increase; CI: 0.92–0.99, p<0.001) were less likely to experience treatment failure. CONCLUSIONS: The long-term virological outcomes from this cohort are promising and comparable to those from research-rich settings. Our results provide further evidence that efavirenz is associated with better virological outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-49131452016-06-20 First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda Castelnuovo, Barbara Kiragga, Agnes Mubiru, Frank Kambugu, Andrew Kamya, Moses Reynolds, Steven J J Int AIDS Soc Research Article INTRODUCTION: The majority of studies from resource-limited settings only report short-term virological outcomes of patients on antiretroviral treatment (ART). We aim to describe the long-term durability of first-line ART and identify factors associated with long-term virological outcomes. METHODS: At the Infectious Diseases Institute in Kampala, Uganda, 559 adult patients starting ART in 2004 were enrolled into a research cohort and monitored with viral load (VL) testing every six months for 10 years. We report the proportion and cumulative probability of 1) achieving virologic suppression (at least one VL <400 copies/ml); 2) experiencing virologic failure in patients who achieved suppression (two consecutive VLs >1000 copies/ml or one VL >5000, for those without a subsequent one); 3) treatment failure (not attaining virologic suppression or experiencing virologic failure). We used Cox regression methods to determine the characteristics associated with treatment failure. We included gender, baseline age, WHO stage, body mass index, CD4 count, propensity score for initial ART regimen, VL, time-dependent CD4 count and adherence. RESULTS: Of the 559 patients enrolled, 472 (84.8%) had at least one VL (67 died, 13 were lost to follow-up, 4 transferred, 2 had no VL available); 73.6% started on d4T/3TC/nevirapine and 26.4% on AZT/3TC/efavirenz. Patients in the two groups had similar characteristics, except for the higher proportion of patients in WHO Stage 3/4 and higher VL in the efavirenz-based group. Four hundred thirty-nine (93%) patients achieved virologic suppression with a cumulative probability of 0.94 (confidence interval (CI): 0.92–0.96); 74/439 (16.9%) experienced virologic failure with a cumulative probability of 0.18 (CI: 0.15–0.22). In the multivariate analysis, initial d4T/3TC/nevirapine regimen (hazard ratio (HR): 3.02; CI: 3.02 (1.66–5.44, p<0.001)) and baseline VL ≥5 log10 copies/ml (HR: 2.29; CI: 1.29–4.04) were associated with treatment failures; patients of older age (HR: 0.87 per five-year increase; CI: 0.77–0.99), with adherence >95% (HR: 0.04; CI: 0.02–0.11) and with higher time-dependent CD4 count (HR: 0.94 per 50 cells/µl increase; CI: 0.92–0.99, p<0.001) were less likely to experience treatment failure. CONCLUSIONS: The long-term virological outcomes from this cohort are promising and comparable to those from research-rich settings. Our results provide further evidence that efavirenz is associated with better virological outcomes. International AIDS Society 2016-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4913145/ /pubmed/27319742 http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.1.20773 Text en © 2016 Castelnuovo B et al; licensee International AIDS Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Castelnuovo, Barbara
Kiragga, Agnes
Mubiru, Frank
Kambugu, Andrew
Kamya, Moses
Reynolds, Steven J
First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda
title First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda
title_full First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda
title_fullStr First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda
title_short First-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in Uganda
title_sort first-line antiretroviral therapy durability in a 10-year cohort of naïve adults started on treatment in uganda
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4913145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27319742
http://dx.doi.org/10.7448/IAS.19.1.20773
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