Sex differences in HIV-1 viral load and progression to AIDS
- PMID: 9820299
- DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(98)02372-1
Sex differences in HIV-1 viral load and progression to AIDS
Abstract
Background: Plasma HIV-1 RNA measurements are used for initiation of antiretroviral treatments. Whether the viral-load association with prognosis is similar in women and men is unknown.
Methods: We studied 812 specimens from 650 injection-drug users (IDUs) participating in a continuous observational study of patients based in a community clinic. HIV-1 load was measured by branched-chain DNA on samples from 527 IDUs from the baseline visit, and by reverse-transcriptase PCR and quantitative microculture on samples from 285 IDUs at a follow-up visit 3 years later. FNDINGS: Women had lower median viral-load measurements than men by branched-chain DNA (3365 vs 8907 copies/mL; p=0.001), reverse-transcriptase PCR (45416 vs 93130 copies/mL; p=0.02), and quantitative microculture (5 vs 8 infectious units per million peripheral blood mononuclear cells; p=0.015). This association remained even after adjustment for CD4 cell count, race, and drug use within the previous 6 months. Time to AIDS was statistically similar for men and women in a univariate proportional-hazards model and in a model adjusting for CD4 cell count. Proportional-hazards models showed that women with the same viral load as men had a 1.6-fold higher risk of AIDS (95% CI 1.10-2.32); or, equivalently, that women with half the viral load of men had a similar time to AIDS as men.
Interpretation: Although a biological mechanism remains unclear, these data suggest that current recommendations for HIV-1 viral-load thresholds to initiate antiretroviral therapy should be revised downwards for women.
Comment in
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Sex differences in HIV-1 viral load and progression to AIDS. Swiss HIV Cohort Study.Lancet. 1999 Feb 13;353(9152):589; author reply 590-1. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(05)75645-2. Lancet. 1999. PMID: 10029004 No abstract available.
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Sex differences in HIV-1 viral load and progression to AIDS. ICONA Study Group. Italian cohort of HIV-1 positive individuals.Lancet. 1999 Feb 13;353(9152):589-90; author reply 590-1. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(05)75646-4. Lancet. 1999. PMID: 10029005 No abstract available.
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Sex differences in HIV-1 viral load and progression to AIDS.Lancet. 1999 Feb 13;353(9152):590-1. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)75647-6. Lancet. 1999. PMID: 10029006 No abstract available.
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Sex differences in HIV-1 viral load due to sex difference in CCR5 expression.Ann Intern Med. 2001 Jan 2;134(1):81-2. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-134-1-200101020-00023. Ann Intern Med. 2001. PMID: 11187428 No abstract available.
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