Several studies of patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 have suggested that women have lower plasma HIV-1 RNA levels than men, even when controlling for CD4 T cell levels. A cross-sectional analysis was performed in 494 patients (21% of whom were women) who enrolled in a prospective study of anemic HIV-1-infected patients requiring transfusion. The median CD4 T cell count and plasma HIV-1 RNA levels were 15 cells/μL and 4.83 log10 copies/mL (67,350 copies/mL), respectively. In unadjusted analyses, women had slightly higher mean log HIV-1 RNA titers than men (0.19 log10 higher copies/mL; 95% confidence interval, -0.05 to 0.44; P = .11). Adjustment for CD4 T cell count, race or ethnicity, injection drug use, and age yielded a smaller sex difference (0.13 log10 copies/mL higher in women; P = .28). In this population of patients with very advanced HIV disease, there is no evidence that women have lower HIV-1 RNA levels than men.
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Kalish, L., Collier, A. C., Flanigan, T. P., Kumar, P. N., Lederman, M., Yomtovian, R., … Vawter, D. E. (2000). Plasma human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 RNA load in men and women with advanced HIV-1 disease. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 182(2), 603–606. https://doi.org/10.1086/315710