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African descent is associated with slower CD4 cell count decline in treatment-naive patients of the Swiss HIV Cohort Study
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1195983
Author(s) Müller, Viktor; von Wyl, Viktor; Yerly, Sabine; Böni, Jürg; Klimkait, Thomas; Bürgisser, Philippe; Ledergerber, Bruno; Günthard, Huldrych F; Bonhoeffer, Sebastian; Swiss HIV Cohort Study
Author(s) at UniBasel Klimkait, Thomas
Year 2009
Title African descent is associated with slower CD4 cell count decline in treatment-naive patients of the Swiss HIV Cohort Study
Journal AIDS : official journal of the International AIDS Society
Volume 23
Number 10
Pages / Article-Number 1269-76
Keywords African descent, disease progression, HIV-1, HIV subtypes, host factors
Abstract OBJECTIVE: We investigated the effect of descent (African versus European) on the progression of untreated HIV infections in a prospective cohort study of HIV-1-infected individuals. METHODS: We estimated the linear rate of decline of the CD4 cell count and the setpoint viral load in patients with sufficient data points. The effect of descent was assessed by microltivariate regression models including descent, sex, viral subtype, the earliest date of confirmed infection, age, and the baseline CD4 cell count; the rate of CD4 cell count decline was also analyzed with mixed-effect models and with matched comparisons between patients of African and European descent based on the baseline CD4 cell count. RESULTS: We found that the decline slope of the CD4 cell count was significantly less steep (+26.6 cells/microl per year; 95% confidence interval, 12.3-41.0; P < 0.001) in patients of African descent (n = 123) compared with patients of European descent (n = 463), and this effect was independent of differences in the infecting viral subtypes. Matched comparisons confirmed the effect of African descent (P < 0.001). Remarkably, the rate of CD4 cell count decline depended strongly on the viral setpoint in patients of European descent (-46.3 cells/microl per year/log10 RNA copies/ml; 95% confidence interval, -55.8 to -36.7; P < 0.001) but not in patients of African descent. CONCLUSION: Slower disease progression in patients of African descent might be related to host factors allowing better tolerance of high virus levels in patients of African descent compared with patients of European descent.
Publisher Current Science
ISSN/ISBN 0269-9370
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6006161
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1097/QAD.0b013e32832d4096
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19461503
ISI-Number WOS:000267279800010
Document type (ISI) Journal Article, Multicenter Study
 
   

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