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Case Reports
. 2000 Sep 19;133(6):430-4.
doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-133-6-200009190-00010.

Retroviral rebound syndrome after cessation of suppressive antiretroviral therapy in three patients with chronic HIV infection

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Case Reports

Retroviral rebound syndrome after cessation of suppressive antiretroviral therapy in three patients with chronic HIV infection

R Colven et al. Ann Intern Med. .

Abstract

Background: Although viral rebound follows cessation of suppressive antiretroviral therapy in chronic HIV infection, a viremic clinical syndrome has not been described.

Objective: To describe a retroviral syndrome associated with cessation of effective antiretroviral therapy in chronic HIV infection.

Design: Case reports.

Setting: Outpatient HIV specialty clinics in Seattle, Washington, and Boston, Massachusetts.

Patients: Three patients with chronic HIV infection who discontinued suppressive antiretroviral therapy.

Measurements: Clinical course, plasma HIV RNA levels, and CD4 cell counts before, during, and after cessation of antiretroviral therapy.

Results: Within 6 weeks after stopping antiretroviral therapy, each patient experienced a clinical illness that resembled a primary HIV syndrome. This coincided with a marked increase in HIV RNA level and, in two of three patients, a decrease in CD4 cell count. After antiretroviral therapy was restarted, each patient's symptoms rapidly resolved in association with resuppression of HIV RNA and increase in CD4 cell count or percentage.

Conclusion: A retroviral rebound syndrome similar to that seen in primary HIV syndrome can occur in patients with chronic HIV infection after cessation of suppressive antiretroviral therapy.

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