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1.
We sought to determine the utility of repeat genotypic resistance testing (GRT) and the clinical response in HIV-1-infected patients with known resistance to three of the major classes of antiretroviral drugs. The HIV-1 genetic sequences for 20 patients who had high-level 3 class resistance demonstrated on a prior GRT (3C-GRT 1) measured during the period from November 1, 2000 through July 1, 2004 were retrospectively evaluated. At the time of 3C-GRT 1, the median CD4 count and HIV-1 RNA viral load were 168 cells/mm(3) and 4.5 log copies per milliliter, respectively. The median time to the second GRT (3C-GRT 2) was 17 months. At that time, the median CD4 count and VL were 140 cells/mm(3) and 4.9 log copies per milliliter (p = 0.8 and p = 0.12, respectively). On 3C-GRT 2, all patients retained essentially identical mutations, with the exception of the loss of the M184V mutation in 6 patients. After 3C-GRT 2, all patients continued on protease inhibitor-containing highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimens. At 24 weeks after 3C-GRT 2, there was no significant change in CD4 count or HIV-1 RNA viral load (p = 0.68 and p = 0.30, respectively). Repeat GRT in patients with documented high-level 3 class resistance does not provide new or clinically useful information. Under continued antiretroviral selective pressure, the viral genetic sequences in this patient population remained stable. In addition, continuing HAART regimens containing protease inhibitors appeared to forestall further immunological and virologic deterioration in patients with multiple resistance mutations. Providers should focus on obtaining access to combinations of novel agents for patients with 3 class resistance rather than repeated GRT.  相似文献   

2.
The outcome and predictors of virologic treatment failure of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) were determined for 271 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected protease inhibitor-naive persons. During a follow-up of 48 weeks after the initiation of HAART, 6.3% of patients experienced at least one new AIDS-defining event, and 3.0% died. Virologic treatment failure occurred in 40% (indinavir, 27%; ritonavir, 30%; saquinavir, 59%; ritonavir plus saquinavir, 32%; chi2, P=.001). Risk factors for treatment failure were baseline plasma HIV-1 RNA (odds ratio [OR], 1.70 per log10 copies increase in plasma HIV-1 RNA), baseline CD4 cell count (OR, 1. 35 per 100 CD4 cells/mm3 decrease), and use of saquinavir versus other protease inhibitors (OR, 3.21). During the first year of treatment, 53% of all patients changed (part of) their original HAART regimen at least once. This was significantly more frequent for regimens containing saquinavir (62%; 27% for virologic failure) or ritonavir (64%; 55% for intolerance) as single protease inhibitor.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: In clinical trials, highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) reduces plasma HIV-1 RNA levels to less than 500 copies/mL in 60% to 90% of patients with HIV-1 infection. The performance of such therapy outside of the clinical trial setting is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To determine factors associated with failure to suppress HIV-1 RNA levels and adverse drug reactions in a cohort of patients in whom protease inhibitor-containing therapy was begun in a large urban clinic. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: Johns Hopkins HIV Clinic in Baltimore, Maryland. PATIENTS: 273 protease inhibitor-naive patients began taking a protease inhibitor regimen containing at least one other antiretroviral drug to which the patients had not previously been exposed. MEASUREMENTS: Demographic variables, plasma HIV-1 RNA levels, CD4+ lymphocyte counts, and adverse drug reactions. RESULTS: Levels of HIV-1 RNA were undetectable in 42% of the cohort at 1 to 90 days, in 44% at 3 to 7 months, and in 37% at 7 to 14 months. Factors associated with failure to suppress viral load at two or more time points included higher rates of missed clinic appointments, nonwhite ethnicity, age 40 years or younger, injection drug use, lower baseline CD4+ lymphocyte count, and higher baseline viral load. In a multivariate model, only higher rates of missed clinic appointments were independently associated with viral suppression at 1 year. Ritonavir was associated with adverse drug reactions about twice as frequently as indinavir or nelfinavir, and women experienced significantly more adverse effects than men. CONCLUSIONS: Unselected patients in whom HAART is started in a clinic setting achieve viral suppression substantially less frequently than do patients in controlled clinical trials. Missed clinic visits were the most important risk factor for failure to suppress HIV-1 RNA levels. Studies are needed to identify interventions that maximize the performance of HAART in inner-city clinics.  相似文献   

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Oral candidosis (OC) has been proposed as a clinical marker of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) success or failure. The principal objective of this work was to assess whether the presence OC is associated with immunologic or virologic failure in patients with HIV/AIDS undergoing HAART. One hundred fifty-one patients with HIV/AIDS from Regional Hospital "Carlos Haya," Malaga, Spain, were examined orally. All patients had been undergoing HAART for a minimum of 6 months prior to oral examination. OC diagnosis was in accordance with World Health Organization-Centers for Disease Control (WHO-CDC) criteria. Age, gender, route of HIV infection, CD4 lymphocyte counts, and viral load were taken from the medical records. In regard to HAART response the patients were classified as: virologic- responders (viral load < 50 copies per milliliter), virologic nonresponders (viral load >50 copies per milliliter); immunologic responders (CD4 cells counts > 500 per milliliter), and immunologic nonresponders (CD4 cells counts < 500 per milliliter). Prevalence of OC was determined for each group. The presence of OC was closely related to immune failure (p 0.006; odds ratio [OR] 3.38 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.262-12.046) in patients with HIV/AIDS undergoing HAART. The probability of immune failure in the presence of OC was 91% for men who have sex with men, 95.5% for heterosexuals, and 96% for intravenous drug users. In conclusion, OC should be considered a clinical marker of immune failure in patients with HIV/AIDS undergoing HAART.  相似文献   

6.
To investigate the clinical, virologic and immunologic consequences of planned treatment interruptions in chronically HIV-infected patients. One hundred forty-one patients with undetectable viral load for at least 6 months and CD4+ T cells count greater than 500 per microliter were recruited. Their antiretroviral therapy was stopped and clinical, analytic, virologic, and immunologic data were recorded at baseline, during discontinuation, and after restarting treatment. Viral load rebound after discontinuation in 137 (97%) patients, and was similar to prehighly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) levels. A rapid decrease in CD4+ T-cell count (median, 240 cells per microliter), was observed in the first 3 months in all patients, with pronounced differences between them. After a median follow-up of 36 months, 45.5% patients were still without therapy. Factors related to a more severe decline were a prior lower CD4+ T nadir (<200 cells per microliter) before starting HAART, a greater increase (>500 cells per microliter) with it, a higher CD4+ T-cell count before interruption (>800 cells per microliter) and a higher viral load rebound after it. The increase in CD4+ T-cell counts after reinitiation was slower than the decline and only 55% of patients have regained the preinterruption levels at 12 months of follow- up. Twelve infectious events were registered. Treatment failure related to drug resistance was observed in two patients. Planned treatment interruptions may be safe in selected patients with previous CD4+ T cell nadir greater than 200 cells per microliter and pre-HAART VL less than 55.000 copies per milliliter, but should be not recommended in patients with the prognostic factors related to a rapid decline described in this study. Furthermore, there is a considerable concern about the development of drug resistance and the possibility of an incomplete immune reconstitution after the treatment interruption in some patients.  相似文献   

7.
The introduction of potent combinations of antiviral drugs is a major breakthrough in the treatment of HIV. We investigated the long-term virologic outcome and the development of resistance after initiating highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in drug-naive patients in daily clinical practice. Twenty-five treatment-naive HIV-1 patients were started on HAART. Fifteen patients responded with a drop in viral load below the limit of detection during 35.5 (interquartile range: 7) months of therapy. In 6 of 10 patients with virologic failure, virus with resistance-related mutations against the received drugs emerged. Compared with responders (R), nonresponding (NR) patients were in a later disease stage at therapy start (p = 0.0089) with lower CD4 cell counts at baseline (p = 0.040), and a lower proportion of nonresponders showed protease inhibitor (PI) levels above C(min) (p = 0.049). More NR patients showed secondary PI mutations at baseline (p = 0.079), and the CCR2-64I coreceptor polymorphism was absent among NR patients, compared with 38.5% of R patients displaying CCR2-64I (p = 0.053), although the differences were not significant. In conclusion, starting HAART in antiretroviral drug-naive HIV-infected patients followed in daily clinical practice prevented viral breakthrough for up to 44 months in 60% of the patients. Virologic failure was associated with the development of resistance-related mutations, a later stage of disease at start of therapy and lower PI drug levels.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Adherence to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for human immunodeficiency syndrome type 1 (HIV-1) infection is essential to sustain viral suppression and prevent drug resistance. We investigated adherence to HAART among patients in a clinical cohort study. METHODS: Patients receiving HAART had their plasma concentrations of protease inhibitors or nevirapine measured and completed a questionnaire on adherence. We determined the percentage of patients who reported taking all antiretroviral medication on time and according to dietary instructions in the past week. Drug exposure was compared between patients reporting deviation from their regimen and fully adherent patients. Among patients who received HAART for at least 24 weeks, we assessed the association between adherence and virologic outcome. RESULTS: A total of 224 of 261 eligible patients completed a questionnaire. Forty-seven percent reported taking all antiretroviral medication on time and according to dietary instructions. Patients who reported deviation from their regimen showed lower drug exposure compared with fully adherent patients (median concentration ratio, 0.81 vs 1.07; P =.001). Among those receiving HAART for at least 24 weeks, patients reporting deviation from their regimen were less likely to have plasma HIV-1 RNA levels below 500 copies/mL (adjusted odds ratio, 4.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-11.6) compared with fully adherent patients. CONCLUSIONS: Only half of the patients took all antiretroviral medication in accordance with time and dietary instructions in the preceding week. Deviation from the antiretroviral regimen was associated with decreased drug exposure and a decreased likelihood of having suppressed plasma HIV-1 RNA loads. Patient adherence should remain a prime concern in the management of HIV-1 infection.  相似文献   

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The viral kinetics of HERV-K in HIV-1-infected patients receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is not unknown. HERV-K kinetic modeling may provide insight into factors altering the effectiveness of HAART in suppressing HIV-1 burden. We conducted a longitudinal study measuring the HERV-K RNA titers in four patients with successful HIV-1-suppressive HAART and in six patients undergoing HAART failure. HERV-K titers were usually undetectable in patients with successful HAART, and when detected, HERV-K titers remained below 5000 copies/ml. On the other hand, HERV-K RNA was consistently detected in patients who failed to respond to HAART before and after HIV-1 rebounds (p < 0.001). Elevated HERV-K RNA titers frequently preceded HIV-1 rebounds. These results suggest that HERV-K viral load may predict HIV-1 reactivation. HERV-K RNA testing might be clinically useful in predicting the onset of HIV-1 resistance due to suboptimal antiretroviral drug levels and/or poor adherence to treatment.  相似文献   

12.
In order to establish the role of the protease inhibitor nelfinavir in current clinical practice, a prospective 18-month open-label comparison of efficacy and tolerability of nelfinavir was performed among HIV-infected patients who either incorporated nelfinavir in their first-line highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimen (group A, 57 patients), or who added nelfinavir to a rescue antiretroviral regimen (following at least two attempts with protease inhibitor-based HAART) (group B, 67 patients). All evaluable data were analyzed according to the prior and concurrent antiretroviral therapy, including genotypic resistance assays for patients undergoing salvage therapy. A significantly better virologic outcome (as expressed by a > 2 log(10) drop of plasma viremia versus baseline or attainment of undetectable levels), was shown among patients belonging to group A versus group B, where a number of genotypic mutations possibly elicited by previous anti-HIV treatment strongly impaired a potent and sustained nelfinavir activity. On the whole, the immunologic response (as expressed by the mean CD4(+) lymphocyte count versus baseline), substantially paralleled the virologic one in all analyzed subgroups, but a tendency toward a maintained immunologic competence was also observed in the majority of patients experiencing virologic failure. Nelfinavir introduction was sufficiently safe, because a limited percentage of patients suffered from mild-to-moderate, novel, or continuing adverse events, which proved significantly more frequent in the salvage group but did not affect adherence to HAART.  相似文献   

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OBJECTIVE: To derive and internally validate a clinical prediction rule for virologic response based on CD4 cell count increase after initiation of HAART in a resource-limited setting. DESIGN AND METHODS: A retrospective cohort study at two HIV care clinics in Gaborone, Botswana. The participants were previously treatment-naive HIV-1-infected individuals initiating HAART. The main outcome measure was a plasma HIV-1 RNA level (viral load) < or = 400 copies/ml (i.e. undetectable) 6 months after initiating HAART. RESULTS: The ability of CD4 cell count increase to predict an undetectable viral load was significantly better in those with baseline CD4 cell counts < or = 100 cells/microl [area under the ROC curve (AUC), 0.78; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.67-0.89; versus AUC, 0.60; 95% CI, 0.48-0.71; P = 0.018]. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of a CD4 cell count increase of > or = 50 cells/microl for an undetectable viral load in those with baseline CD4 cell counts < or = 100 cells/microl were 93.1, 61.3, 92.5 and 63.3%, respectively. Alternatively, these values were 47.8, 87.1, 95.0 and 24.5%, respectively, if a increase in CD4 cell count of > or = 150 cells/microl was used. CONCLUSIONS: CD4 cell count increase after initiating HAART has only moderate discriminative ability in identifying patients with an undetectable viral load, and the predictive ability is higher [corrected] in patients with lower baseline CD4 cell counts. Although HIV treatment programs in resource-constrained settings could consider the use of CD4 cell count increases to triage viral load testing, more accurate approaches to monitoring virologic failure are urgently needed.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Sustained elevations in CD4 cell counts commonly occur despite incomplete viral suppression with protease inhibitor-based antiretroviral therapy. OBJECTIVES: To determine the incidence and risk factors associated with return of CD4 cell count to pre-therapy levels in patients experiencing virologic failure of protease inhibitor therapy. DESIGN: This is a clinic-based cohort study of HIV-infected adults who failed to maintain durable viral suppression on a protease inhibitor-based regimen. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Virologic failure was defined as persistent plasma HIV RNA level > 500 copies/ml. Immunologic failure was defined as return of CD4 cell count to pre-therapy levels. RESULTS: A total of 291 patients experienced virologic failure on a protease inhibitor-based regimen and had a treatment-mediated CD4 cell increase above pre-therapy levels at the time of virologic failure. If patient data were censored at the time a successful salvage regimen was initiated, then the median time to immunologic failure after the onset of virologic failure was 3 years. If patient data were also censored at the time therapy was discontinued, then 36.8% of the cohort experienced immunologic failure after 3 years of continuous virologic failure. The change in viral load from a pre-treatment baseline, and not the absolute level of viremia achieved, was a strong and independent predictor of immunologic failure. Discontinuing therapy was associated with immunologic failure independent of viral load changes. CONCLUSION: Reduction in T CD4+ cell numbers may eventually occur during prolonged virologic failure of a protease inhibitor-based regimen and is predicted by the degree of virologic suppression below a pre-therapy 'set-point'.  相似文献   

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The objective of this case series and literature review is to characterize the clinical course and prognosis of HIV-infected patients with Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) flare during immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS), a heterogeneous and sometimes fatal disorder of immune perturbation after initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Medical records of 9 HIV-infected patients with KS flare after virologic and immunologic response to HAART were reviewed from a single institution. An additional 10 cases were abstracted by computerized search of the medical literature. In our single institution series, mean time to onset of KS flare was 5 weeks. Pretreatment mean CD4+ count was 190 cells/mm(3) and mean HIV viral load was 153,934 copies per milliliter. During flare, mean CD4+ count was 256 cells/mm(3) and mean HIV viral load was 1156 copies per milliliter. Similar aggregate results are represented in the literature. Six fatalities are reported, 4 from pulmonary KS and 2 from unrelated causes. Systemic chemotherapy universally led to tumor regression, but was administered in only 10 of 19 cases. In no instance was HAART discontinued. Onset of IRIS-associated KS flare is observed as early as 3 weeks, with most cases diagnosed within 2 months after immunologic and virologic response to HAART. Such a flare does not necessarily portend a poor prognosis. Even for those patients with rapidly symptomatic KS, early systemic chemotherapy is effective in suppressing IRIS-associated flare. Close clinical supervision is warranted for the KS patient initiating, changing, or resuming HAART. Particular vigilance is recommended for pulmonary involvement.  相似文献   

18.
The goal of antiretroviral therapy is clinical benefit through the suppression of viral replication and the immunologic reconstitution of HIV-1-infected patients. In spite of the availability of different highly active antiretroviral therapy only some patients sustain undetectable plasma viremia. We performed an observational study from October 1987 to February 2001 on immunologic and clinical outcome of 148 HIV-1-infected patients from an open clinical cohort at S?o Paulo University, Brazil. The median T CD4+ at starting first monitored regimen was 227 cells per microliter, with 65% of patients previously exposed to antiretroviral regimens, mostly dual therapy. Virologic response to antiretroviral therapy, after a median period of 179 weeks of monitored treatment, allowed classifying patients as aviremic (RNA plasma viremia below 500 copies per milliliter); viremic (current viral load at historic levels), and viremic-attenuated groups (detectable viremia, but > 1 log viral suppression). HIV RNA viral load, T CD4+ cells count, HIV-1 pol sequencing, inflammatory parameters, and clinical events were documented during a median follow-up of 251 weeks. This study observed better clinical and immunologic responses in the aviremic group, but the viremic-attenuated group showed a significant gain in CD4+ cells (p < 0.013) and a decreased number of cases progressing to an AIDS-defining clinical condition (p < 0.001) compared to the viremic group.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVE: Few data exist on the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy in individuals infected with HIV in the Caribbean. We evaluated the virological and immunological responses of HIV-infected adults starting highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). DESIGN: This was a prospective observational cohort study. METHODS: A total of 158 antiretroviral-naive patients who initiated HAART between January 2002 and March 2003, and completed at least 6 months of treatment and follow up, were included in the analysis. The response to therapy was assessed by changes in CD4 cell counts and viral loads from baseline. The mean increase in CD4 cell count, the rate of virological success (a viral load of <50 HIV-1 RNA copies/mL) and the rate of immunological success (an increase in CD4 cell count of > or =50 cells/microL over the baseline value) after commencing HAART were measured. RESULTS: In total, 82% of patients (123 of 150) achieved viral loads of <50 copies/mL after 6 months of therapy. Viral success rate after 6 months of HAART was similar irrespective of gender, pre-HAART CD4 cell count and pre-HAART viral load. However, patients older than 40 years were significantly more likely to achieve virological success than those younger than 40 years. At 6 months after starting HAART, 79.5% of patients were estimated to have achieved immunological success and 17.9% had an increase in CD4 cell count of > or =200 cells/microL over the baseline value. The median increase in CD4 cell count for the 156 patients who had CD4 cell counts at baseline and at 6 months of therapy was 122 cells/microL. CONCLUSION: In this cohort of antiretroviral-naive HIV-infected adults, there was a high rate of virological and immunological success after 6 months of HAART, irrespective of the pre-HAART viral load and CD4 cell count.  相似文献   

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