Personalized life expectancy and treatment benefit index of antiretroviral therapy

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Abstract

Background: The progression of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) within host includes typical stages and the Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) is shown to be effective in slowing down this progression. There are great challenges in describing the entire HIV disease progression and evaluating comprehensive effects of ART on life expectancy for HIV infected individuals on ART. Methods: We develop a novel summative treatment benefit index (TBI), based on an HIV viral dynamics model and linking the infection and viral production rates to the Weibull function. This index summarizes the integrated effect of ART on the life expectancy (LE) of a patient, and more importantly, can be reconstructed from the individual clinic data. Results: The proposed model, faithfully mimicking the entire HIV disease progression, enables us to predict life expectancy and trace back the timing of infection. We fit the model to the longitudinal data in a cohort study in China to reconstruct the treatment benefit index, and we describe the dependence of individual life expectancy on key ART treatment specifics including the timing of ART initiation, timing of emergence of drug resistant virus variants and ART adherence. Conclusions: We show that combining model predictions with monitored CD4 counts and viral loads can provide critical information about the disease progression, to assist the design of ART regimen for maximizing the treatment benefits.

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Xiao, Y., Sun, X., Tang, S., Zhou, Y., Peng, Z., Wu, J., & Wang, N. (2017). Personalized life expectancy and treatment benefit index of antiretroviral therapy. Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling, 14(1), 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12976-016-0047-0

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