Virologic suppression in nevirapine-exposed HIV-infected infants initiating antiretroviral therapy in rural Uganda |
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Authors: | Kay Jenna Wanzira Humphrey Sandison Taylor Kakuru Abel Bigira Victor Kamya Moses Homsy Jaco Tappero Jordan W Havlir Diane Dorsey Grant Ruel Theodore |
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Affiliation: | Department of Medicine, San Francisco General Hospital, University of California-San Francisco, CA 94110, USA. |
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Abstract: | We measured virologic suppression among 34 nevirapine (NVP)-exposed HIV-infected children with median age of 8.6 months (range: 3.2-19.9) initiating NVP-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) in rural Uganda. In Kaplan-Meier analysis, the cumulative probability of virologic suppression, defined as having two consecutive HIV-1 RNA <400 copies ml(-1) by 18 months was 56%. In multivariate Cox proportional hazard modeling, the following pre-ART measurements were independently associated with an increased probability of viral suppression: increasing age [hazard ratio (HR) =1.28 per 1 month increase in age, p?=?0.002], lower viral load (HR?=?3.54 for HIV RNA?>?7?50?000 copies ml(-1), p?=?0.03) and high CD4% (HR?=?6.0 for CD4%?>?25, p?=?0.003). These results lend additional support to the 2010 World Health Organization recommendations that protease inhibitors be used to treat NVP-exposed children, but that NVP-based ART should be initiated before the decline of CD4% to optimize outcomes in NVP-exposed children when protease inhibitors are not available. |
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