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Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa

BACKGROUND: Washington, DC, and sub-Saharan Africa are both affected by generalized HIV epidemics. However, care for persons living with HIV (PLWH) and clinical outcomes may differ in these geographically and culturally diverse areas. We compared patient and clinical site characteristics among adult...

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Autores principales: Monroe, Anne K., Polyak, Christina S., Castel, Amanda D., Esber, Allahna L., Byrne, Morgan E., Maswai, Jonah, Owuoth, John, Maganga, Lucas, Bahemana, Emmanuel, Adamu, Yakubu, Iroezindu, Michael, Kibuuka, Hannah, Kiweewa, Francis, Greenberg, Alan E., Crowell, Trevor A., Ake, Julie A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8979457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35377881
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262204
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author Monroe, Anne K.
Polyak, Christina S.
Castel, Amanda D.
Esber, Allahna L.
Byrne, Morgan E.
Maswai, Jonah
Owuoth, John
Maganga, Lucas
Bahemana, Emmanuel
Adamu, Yakubu
Iroezindu, Michael
Kibuuka, Hannah
Kiweewa, Francis
Greenberg, Alan E.
Crowell, Trevor A.
Ake, Julie A.
author_facet Monroe, Anne K.
Polyak, Christina S.
Castel, Amanda D.
Esber, Allahna L.
Byrne, Morgan E.
Maswai, Jonah
Owuoth, John
Maganga, Lucas
Bahemana, Emmanuel
Adamu, Yakubu
Iroezindu, Michael
Kibuuka, Hannah
Kiweewa, Francis
Greenberg, Alan E.
Crowell, Trevor A.
Ake, Julie A.
author_sort Monroe, Anne K.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Washington, DC, and sub-Saharan Africa are both affected by generalized HIV epidemics. However, care for persons living with HIV (PLWH) and clinical outcomes may differ in these geographically and culturally diverse areas. We compared patient and clinical site characteristics among adult persons living with HIV (PLWH) enrolled in two longitudinal HIV cohort studies—the African Cohort Study (AFRICOS) and the DC Cohort. METHODS: The DC Cohort is a clinic-based city-wide longitudinal cohort comprised of PLWH attending 15 HIV clinics in Washington, DC. Patients’ socio-demographic characteristics, clinical evaluations, and laboratory data are retrospectively collected from electronic medical records and limited manual chart abstraction. AFRICOS is a prospective observational cohort of PLWH and uninfected volunteers attending 12 select HIV care and treatment facilities in Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. AFRICOS study participants are a subset of clinic patients who complete protocol-specific visits every 6 months with history and physical examination, questionnaire administration, and blood/sputum collection for ascertainment of HIV outcomes and comorbidities, and neurocognitive and functional assessments. Among participants aged ≥ 18 years, we generated descriptive statistics for demographic and clinical characteristics at enrollment and follow up and compared them using bivariable analyses. RESULTS: The study sample included 2,774 AFRICOS and 8,420 DC Cohort participants who enrolled from January 2013 (AFRICOS)/January 2011 (DC Cohort) through March 2018. AFRICOS participants were significantly more likely to be women (58.8% vs 27.1%) and younger (83.3% vs 61.1% aged < 50 years old) and significantly less likely to be MSM (only 0.1% of AFRICOS population reported MSM risk factor) than DC Cohort. Similar rates of current viral suppression (about 75% of both samples), hypertension, hepatitis B coinfection and alcohol use were observed. However, AFRICOS participants had significantly higher rates of CD4<200 and tuberculosis and significantly lower rates of obesity, DM, hepatitis C coinfection and syphilis. CONCLUSIONS: With similar viral suppression outcomes, but many differences between our cohorts noted, the combined sample provides unique opportunities to assess and compare HIV care and treatment outcomes in the U.S. and sub-Saharan Africa. Comparing these two cohorts may inform care and treatment practices and may pave the way for future pathophysiologic analyses.
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spelling pubmed-89794572022-04-05 Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa Monroe, Anne K. Polyak, Christina S. Castel, Amanda D. Esber, Allahna L. Byrne, Morgan E. Maswai, Jonah Owuoth, John Maganga, Lucas Bahemana, Emmanuel Adamu, Yakubu Iroezindu, Michael Kibuuka, Hannah Kiweewa, Francis Greenberg, Alan E. Crowell, Trevor A. Ake, Julie A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Washington, DC, and sub-Saharan Africa are both affected by generalized HIV epidemics. However, care for persons living with HIV (PLWH) and clinical outcomes may differ in these geographically and culturally diverse areas. We compared patient and clinical site characteristics among adult persons living with HIV (PLWH) enrolled in two longitudinal HIV cohort studies—the African Cohort Study (AFRICOS) and the DC Cohort. METHODS: The DC Cohort is a clinic-based city-wide longitudinal cohort comprised of PLWH attending 15 HIV clinics in Washington, DC. Patients’ socio-demographic characteristics, clinical evaluations, and laboratory data are retrospectively collected from electronic medical records and limited manual chart abstraction. AFRICOS is a prospective observational cohort of PLWH and uninfected volunteers attending 12 select HIV care and treatment facilities in Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. AFRICOS study participants are a subset of clinic patients who complete protocol-specific visits every 6 months with history and physical examination, questionnaire administration, and blood/sputum collection for ascertainment of HIV outcomes and comorbidities, and neurocognitive and functional assessments. Among participants aged ≥ 18 years, we generated descriptive statistics for demographic and clinical characteristics at enrollment and follow up and compared them using bivariable analyses. RESULTS: The study sample included 2,774 AFRICOS and 8,420 DC Cohort participants who enrolled from January 2013 (AFRICOS)/January 2011 (DC Cohort) through March 2018. AFRICOS participants were significantly more likely to be women (58.8% vs 27.1%) and younger (83.3% vs 61.1% aged < 50 years old) and significantly less likely to be MSM (only 0.1% of AFRICOS population reported MSM risk factor) than DC Cohort. Similar rates of current viral suppression (about 75% of both samples), hypertension, hepatitis B coinfection and alcohol use were observed. However, AFRICOS participants had significantly higher rates of CD4<200 and tuberculosis and significantly lower rates of obesity, DM, hepatitis C coinfection and syphilis. CONCLUSIONS: With similar viral suppression outcomes, but many differences between our cohorts noted, the combined sample provides unique opportunities to assess and compare HIV care and treatment outcomes in the U.S. and sub-Saharan Africa. Comparing these two cohorts may inform care and treatment practices and may pave the way for future pathophysiologic analyses. Public Library of Science 2022-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8979457/ /pubmed/35377881 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262204 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Monroe, Anne K.
Polyak, Christina S.
Castel, Amanda D.
Esber, Allahna L.
Byrne, Morgan E.
Maswai, Jonah
Owuoth, John
Maganga, Lucas
Bahemana, Emmanuel
Adamu, Yakubu
Iroezindu, Michael
Kibuuka, Hannah
Kiweewa, Francis
Greenberg, Alan E.
Crowell, Trevor A.
Ake, Julie A.
Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa
title Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa
title_full Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa
title_fullStr Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa
title_full_unstemmed Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa
title_short Clinical similarities and differences between two large HIV cohorts in the United States and Africa
title_sort clinical similarities and differences between two large hiv cohorts in the united states and africa
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8979457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35377881
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262204
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