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High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV

CONTEXT: French Guiana is a South American French territory, where HIV prevalence consistently exceeds 1% in the adult population. In the only correctional facility, HIV prevalence fluctuates at around 4%. AIMS: After describing the population of HIV-positive inmates, we aimed to evaluate mortality...

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Autores principales: Huber, Florence, Merceron, Alice, Madec, Yoann, Gadio, Gueda, About, Vincent, Pastre, Agathe, Coupez, Isabelle, Adenis, Antoine, Adriouch, Leila, Nacher, Mathieu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5409162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28453525
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0175740
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author Huber, Florence
Merceron, Alice
Madec, Yoann
Gadio, Gueda
About, Vincent
Pastre, Agathe
Coupez, Isabelle
Adenis, Antoine
Adriouch, Leila
Nacher, Mathieu
author_facet Huber, Florence
Merceron, Alice
Madec, Yoann
Gadio, Gueda
About, Vincent
Pastre, Agathe
Coupez, Isabelle
Adenis, Antoine
Adriouch, Leila
Nacher, Mathieu
author_sort Huber, Florence
collection PubMed
description CONTEXT: French Guiana is a South American French territory, where HIV prevalence consistently exceeds 1% in the adult population. In the only correctional facility, HIV prevalence fluctuates at around 4%. AIMS: After describing the population of HIV-positive inmates, we aimed to evaluate mortality after release from the correctional facility, and to identify its predictive factors. RATIONALE: Outside North American settings, data on treatment outcome and vital status of HIV-positive former inmates are scarce. There were no data in French Guiana. Filling this gap represents a basis for potential improvements. METHODS: All HIV-infected adults released from an incarceration of 30 days or more, between 2007 and 2013, were enrolled in a retrospective cohort study. Mortality was described over time, one to seven years following release, using Kaplan-Meier estimates. Factors associated with mortality were identified through a non-parametric survival regression model. RESULTS: 147 former inmates were included. The male to female ratio was 4.4. The median age was 37.3 years. The majority were migrants, 25.8% were homeless, 70.1% suffered from substance abuse, with 34.0% of crack-cocaine users. On admission, 78.1% had an early HIV-stage infection (CDC-stage A), with a median CD4 count of 397.5/mm3, 34.0% had one comorbidity, mainly hypertension. Upon release, 50.3% were on ART. Reasons for not being treated were not fulfilling the criteria for 74.6%, and refusing for 15.1%. Before release, 84.5% of the patients on ART had a viral load≤200cp/ml. After release, 8.2% of the cohort had died, with a crude incidence of 33.8/1000 person-years. All recorded deaths were males, with an incidence of 42.2/1000 person-years. Comparing with the age-specific mortality rates for males in French Guiana, the standardized mortality ratio was 14.8. In multivariate analysis, factors associated with death were age and CD4 count before release. CONCLUSION: Despite access to ART while incarcerated, with good virological outcome, the post-release mortality was very high for males, almost 15 times what is observed in the general male population living in French Guiana, after age standardization. Access to ART in correctional facilities may be a necessary, but not sufficient condition to protect male inmates from death after release.
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spelling pubmed-54091622017-05-12 High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV Huber, Florence Merceron, Alice Madec, Yoann Gadio, Gueda About, Vincent Pastre, Agathe Coupez, Isabelle Adenis, Antoine Adriouch, Leila Nacher, Mathieu PLoS One Research Article CONTEXT: French Guiana is a South American French territory, where HIV prevalence consistently exceeds 1% in the adult population. In the only correctional facility, HIV prevalence fluctuates at around 4%. AIMS: After describing the population of HIV-positive inmates, we aimed to evaluate mortality after release from the correctional facility, and to identify its predictive factors. RATIONALE: Outside North American settings, data on treatment outcome and vital status of HIV-positive former inmates are scarce. There were no data in French Guiana. Filling this gap represents a basis for potential improvements. METHODS: All HIV-infected adults released from an incarceration of 30 days or more, between 2007 and 2013, were enrolled in a retrospective cohort study. Mortality was described over time, one to seven years following release, using Kaplan-Meier estimates. Factors associated with mortality were identified through a non-parametric survival regression model. RESULTS: 147 former inmates were included. The male to female ratio was 4.4. The median age was 37.3 years. The majority were migrants, 25.8% were homeless, 70.1% suffered from substance abuse, with 34.0% of crack-cocaine users. On admission, 78.1% had an early HIV-stage infection (CDC-stage A), with a median CD4 count of 397.5/mm3, 34.0% had one comorbidity, mainly hypertension. Upon release, 50.3% were on ART. Reasons for not being treated were not fulfilling the criteria for 74.6%, and refusing for 15.1%. Before release, 84.5% of the patients on ART had a viral load≤200cp/ml. After release, 8.2% of the cohort had died, with a crude incidence of 33.8/1000 person-years. All recorded deaths were males, with an incidence of 42.2/1000 person-years. Comparing with the age-specific mortality rates for males in French Guiana, the standardized mortality ratio was 14.8. In multivariate analysis, factors associated with death were age and CD4 count before release. CONCLUSION: Despite access to ART while incarcerated, with good virological outcome, the post-release mortality was very high for males, almost 15 times what is observed in the general male population living in French Guiana, after age standardization. Access to ART in correctional facilities may be a necessary, but not sufficient condition to protect male inmates from death after release. Public Library of Science 2017-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5409162/ /pubmed/28453525 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0175740 Text en © 2017 Huber et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huber, Florence
Merceron, Alice
Madec, Yoann
Gadio, Gueda
About, Vincent
Pastre, Agathe
Coupez, Isabelle
Adenis, Antoine
Adriouch, Leila
Nacher, Mathieu
High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV
title High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV
title_full High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV
title_fullStr High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV
title_full_unstemmed High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV
title_short High mortality among male HIV-infected patients after prison release: ART is not enough after incarceration with HIV
title_sort high mortality among male hiv-infected patients after prison release: art is not enough after incarceration with hiv
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5409162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28453525
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0175740
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