Publication: Increased Risk of Virologic Rebound in Patients on Antiviral Therapy with a Detectable HIV Load <48 Copies/mL
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Date
2012
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Public Library of Science
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Citation
Henrich, Timothy J., Brian R. Wood, and Daniel R. Kuritzkes. 2012. Increased risk of virologic rebound in patients on antiviral therapy with a detectable HIV load <48 copies/ml. PLoS ONE 7(11): e50065.
Research Data
Abstract
We investigated the independent effects of HIV-1 ”target not detected” measurements versus those that were detectable but below the limit of quantification by Taqman RT-PCR assay on subsequent viral rebound as there are conflicting data regarding the clinical implications of arbitrary or isolated low-level viremia. Cox proportional hazard regression modeling was used to investigate the independent effects of the first HIV-1 load measurement after introduction of the Taqman RT-PCR assay (time-point 0 [T0]), pre-T0 viral loads, CD4 T cell count, race/ethnicity, gender, age and NNRTI use on risk of a confirmed VL >50, >200, >400 and >1000 copies/mL at 22 months follow-up in analyses of all patients and propensity-matched baseline cohorts. 778 patients had a viral load that was either not detected by RT-PCR (N = 596) or detectable, but below the limit of quantification (N = 182) at T0. Detectable viremia, lower T0 CD4 count, decreased age, and having detectable or unknown VL within a year prior to T0 were each associated with viral rebound to >50, >200 and >400 copies/mL. Overall failure rates were low and <5.5% of all patients had confirmed VL >1000 copies/mL. A majority of patients with rebound >200 copies/mL subsequently re-suppressed (28 of 53). A detectable VL <48 copies/mL was independently and significantly associated with subsequent viral rebound, and is cause for clinical concern.
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Keywords
Biology, Microbiology, Virology, Viral Transmission and Infection, Viral Load, Viral Disease Diagnosis, Viral Replication, Medicine, Diagnostic Medicine, Test Evaluation, Infectious Diseases, Viral Diseases, HIV, HIV clinical manifestations, HIV diagnosis and management
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