High Proportions of Patients with Advanced HIV Are Antiretroviral Therapy Experienced: Hospitalization Outcomes from 2 Sub-Saharan African Sites

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Abstract

Background. Human immunodefciency virus (HIV) remains an important cause of hospitalization and death in low-and middleincome countries. Yet morbidity and in-hospital mortality patterns remain poorly characterized, with prior antiretroviral therapy (ART) exposure and treatment failure status largely unknown. Methods. We studied HIV-infected inpatients aged =13 years from cohorts in Kenya and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), assessing clinical and demographic characteristics and hospitalization outcomes. Kenyan inpatients were prospectively enrolled during hospitalization; identical retrospective data were extracted for Congolese patients meeting the study criteria using routine medical information. Results. Among 338 HIV-infected patients in Kenya and 411 in DRC, 83.7% (95% confdence interval [CI], 79.4%-87.3%) and 97.3% (95% CI, 95.2%-98.5%), were admitted with advanced disease (defned as CD4 <200 cells/μL or World Health Organization stage 3/4 illness). Among inpatients with advanced HIV, 35.4% and 21.7% were ART-naive at admission. Patients under care had a median time of 44.1 (interquartile range [IQR], 18.4-90.5) months and 55.9 (IQR, 28.1-99.6) months on treatment; 17.2% (95% CI, 13.5%-21.6%) and 29.6% (95% CI, 25.4%-34.3%) died, 25.9% (95% CI, 16.0%-39.0%) and 22.5% (95% CI, 15.8%-31.0%) of these within 48 hours. Conclusions. Across 2 diverse clinical contexts in sub-Saharan Africa, advanced HIV inpatients were frequently admitted with low CD4 counts, ofen failing frst-line ART. Earlier identifcation of treatment failure and rapid switching to second-line ART are needed.

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Ousley, J., Niyibizi, A. A., Wanjala, S., Vandenbulcke, A., Kirubi, B., Omwoyo, W., … Maman, D. (2018). High Proportions of Patients with Advanced HIV Are Antiretroviral Therapy Experienced: Hospitalization Outcomes from 2 Sub-Saharan African Sites. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 66, S126–S132. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciy103

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