Background: HIV physicians have limited time for cognitive screening. Here we developed an extra-brief, clinically based tool for predicting HIV-associated neurocognitive impairment (HAND) in order to determine which HIV-positive individuals require a more comprehensive neurological/neuropsychological (NP) assessment. Methods: Ninety-seven HIV-positive individuals with advanced disease recruited in an HIV out-patient clinic received standard NP testing. A screening algorithm was developed using support vector machines, an optimized prediction procedure for classifying individuals into two groups (here NP-impaired and NP-normal) based on a set of predictors. Results: The final algorithm utilized age, current CD4 cell count, past central nervous system HIV-related diseases and current treatment duration and required approximately 3 min to complete, with a good overall prediction accuracy of 78% (against the gold standard; NP-impairment status derived from standard NP testing) and a good specificity of 70%. Conclusion: This noncognitive-based algorithm should prove useful to identify HIV-infected patients with advanced disease at high risk of HAND who require more formal assessment. We propose staged guidelines, using the algorithm, for improved HAND therapeutic management. Future larger, international studies are planned to test the predictive effect of nadir CD4 cell count, hepatitis C virus infection, gender, ethnicity and HIV viral clade. We recommend the use of this first version for HIV-infected Caucasian men with advanced disease. © 2010 British HIV Association.
CITATION STYLE
Cysique, L. A., Murray, J. M., Dunbar, M., Jeyakumar, V., & Brew, B. J. (2010). A screening algorithm for HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders. HIV Medicine, 11(10), 642–649. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-1293.2010.00834.x
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.