Effect of baseline CD4 cell counts on the clinical significance of short-term immunologic response to antiretroviral therapy in individuals with virologic suppression

David M Moore, Ross Harris, Viviane Lima, Bob Hogg, Margaret May, Benita Yip, Amy Justice, Amanda Mocroft, Peter Reiss, Fiona Lampe, Geneviève Chêne, Dominique Costagliola, Luigia Elzi, Michael J Mugavero, Antonella D'Arminio Monforte, Caroline Sabin, Daniel Podzamczer, Gerd Fätkenheuer, Schlomo Staszewski, John Gill, Jonathan A C Sterne, Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration, David M Moore, Ross Harris, Viviane Lima, Bob Hogg, Margaret May, Benita Yip, Amy Justice, Amanda Mocroft, Peter Reiss, Fiona Lampe, Geneviève Chêne, Dominique Costagliola, Luigia Elzi, Michael J Mugavero, Antonella D'Arminio Monforte, Caroline Sabin, Daniel Podzamczer, Gerd Fätkenheuer, Schlomo Staszewski, John Gill, Jonathan A C Sterne, Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration

Abstract

Background: Achieving virologic suppression is a clear therapeutic goal for patients receiving combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). However, the effects of immunologic responses, whether measured as CD4 count changes from baseline or CD4 counts at follow-up, in patients with virologic suppression, have not been clearly established.

Methods: Treatment-naive individuals aged > or =16 years, who initiated cART between 1998 and 2005 in participating cohorts of the ART Cohort Collaboration and achieved viral load < or =400 copies per milliliter 6 months after cART initiation, were included. We used Cox models to examine associations of CD4 change from baseline to 6 months, and absolute CD4 counts at 6 months, with subsequent rates of mortality and AIDS. Analyses were stratified by baseline CD4 count.

Results: Among 23,679 eligible participants, the median increase in CD4 count at 6 months, and the implications of these increases for subsequent mortality and AIDS, varied with baseline CD4 count. Mortality hazard ratios for increases of 0-50 cells per microliter, compared with >100 cells per microliter, were 1.87 (95% confidence interval: 1.28 to 2.73), 1.60 (1.13 to 2.28), 0.98 (0.58 to 1.65) and 1.24 (0.70 to 2.18) in participants with baseline CD4 cell count <50, 50-199, 200-349 and > or =350 cells per microliter, respectively. In contrast, hazard ratios for mortality or AIDS associated with absolute CD4 cell counts at 6 months were similar across all but the highest baseline CD4 cell count strata.

Conclusion: It is not possible to derive thresholds for change in CD4 count that define an adequate immunologic response in individuals receiving cART. Absolute CD4 counts at 6 months are a more useful measure of immunologic response and subsequent prognosis.

Source: PubMed

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