Effect of Early versus Deferred Antiretroviral Therapy for HIV on Survival
Harborview Medical Center · University of Washington · +18 more institutions
Abstract
The optimal time for the initiation of antiretroviral therapy for asymptomatic patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is uncertain.
We conducted two parallel analyses involving a total of 17,517 asymptomatic patients with HIV infection in the United States and Canada who received medical care during the period from 1996 through 2005. None of the patients had undergone previous antiretroviral therapy. In each group, we stratified the patients according to the CD4+ count (351 to 500 cells per cubic millimeter or >500 cells per cubic millimeter) at the initiation of antiretroviral therapy. In each group, we compared the relative risk of death for patients who initiated therapy when the CD4+ count was above each of the two thresholds of interest (early-therapy group) with that of patients who deferred therapy until the CD4+ count fell below these thresholds (deferred-therapy group).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 78.11
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 65
Authors
34- MMMari M. KitahataCorresponding
Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington, Seattle University
- SJStephen J. Gange
Harborview Medical Center, Johns Hopkins University
- AGAlison G. Abraham
Harborview Medical Center, Johns Hopkins University
- BMBarry Merriman
Harborview Medical Center, Johns Hopkins University
- MSMichael S Saag
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Harborview Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Antiretroviral therapy
- Asymptomatic
- Internal medicine
- Cohort
- Confidence interval
- Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Relative risk
- Good health and well-being