Baseline CD4+ cell count, not viral load, correlates with virologic suppression induced by potent antiretroviral therapy

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between viral load suppression and baseline viral load as well as that between viral load suppression and baseline CD4(+) cell count. DESIGN: Meta-analysis of published and presented studies. METHODS: Trials of two nucleoside analogs plus nevirapine, indinavir, nelfinavir, or efavirenz as therapy for antiretroviral treatment-naive patients with HIV infection or AIDS who were followed-up for at least 6 months were included in the meta-analysis. The proportion of patients with viral loads of <200-500 copies/ml at 6 and 12 months (total number of patients, 1619 and 761, respectively) was regressed to the mean or median baseline viral load and CD4(+) cell count. RESULTS: Thirty-six treatment arms from 30 studies were identified. Multivariate regression demonstrated a significant correlation between baseline CD4(+) cell count and virologic suppression at 6 and 12 months ( t = 2.85, p =.008; and t = 3.08, p =.010, respectively) but not between baseline viral load and virologic suppression ( t = 0.92, p =.365; and t = 1.31, p =.215, respectively). The same pattern was seen in a subanalysis of trials of nevirapine-containing therapy (CD4(+) cell count: t = 2.89, p =.014 at 6 months; viral load suppression: t = 0.84, p =.415). CONCLUSIONS: Baseline CD4(+) cell count was a better predictor of virologic suppression induced by triple combination therapy than was baseline viral load.

Authors

Skowron G, Street JC, Obee EM

Year

2001

Topics

  • Population(s)
    • Other
  • Engagement and Care Cascade
    • Treatment

Link

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