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Title
Anthropometric and immunological success of antiretroviral therapy and prediction of virological success in west African adults. |
Full text
http://www.hal.inserm.fr/inserm-00266573/en/ |
Date
2008 |
Author(s)
Messou, Eugène; Gabillard, Delphine; Moh, Raoul; Inwoley, André; Sorho, Souleymane; Eholié, Serge; Rouet, François; Seyler, Catherine; Danel, Christine; Anglaret, Xavier |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The 6 month assessment of the response to antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a critical step. In sub-Saharan Africa, few people have access to plasma viral-load measurement. We assessed the gain or loss in body mass index (BMI), alone or in combination with the gain or loss in CD4+ T-cell count (CD4), as a tool for predicting the response to ART. METHODS: In a cohort of 622 adults in Abidjan, C?d'Ivoire, we calculated the sensitivity, specificity and predictive values of BMI and CD4 for treatment success defined as viral-load undetectability (< 300 copies/ml) as gold standard. FINDINGS: After 6 months of ART, the median change in BMI was an increase of 1.0 kg/m(2) (interquartile range, IQR: 0.0-2.1), the median change in CD4 an increase of 148/ml (IQR: 54-230) and 84% of patients reached viral-load undetectability. The distribution of change in BMI was similar among patients who reached undetectability and those who did not (increases of 1.06 kg/m(2) versus 0.99 kg/m(2), P = 0.51). With larger changes in BMI, the specificity for treatment success increased but its sensitivity decreased and its positive predictive value was stable around 85%. All results remained similar when combining changes in BMI with those in CD4 and when stratifying by groups of baseline BMI or CD4. CONCLUSION: In settings where viral-load measurement is not available, a high BMI gain does not reflect virological success, even when combined with a high CD4 gain. In our population, most patients with detectable viral-load had probably adhered to the drug regimen sufficiently to reach significant gains in body mass and CD4 count but had adhered insufficiently to reach viral suppression. |
Subject(s)
Life Sciences/Santé publique et épidémiologie; sub-Saharan Africa; HAART; body mass index; CD4 count; virological success; adults; predictive value |
Language
EN |
Publisher
HAL - CCSD |
Relation
http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/26/65/73/PDF/MESSOU.pdf |
Type of publication
peer-reviewed article |
Identifier
HAL:inserm-00266573, version 1; PUBMED:18568272 |
Repository
France - Hyper Article en Ligne (HAL)
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Added to C-A: 2008-12-22;03:46:16 |
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