Serum levels of virus burden in early-stage human immunodeficiency virus type 1 disease in women

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Abstract

The fundamental clinical, viral, and immunologic features of early- stage human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) disease were examined in a seroprevalent cohort of 28 men and 14 women assessed longitudinally at three equally dispersed time points over a mean of 43 months. There were no gender differences in the relative risk of developing AIDS-defining end points or death. The median serum RNA levels assessed at the three study time points were 3.3-, 4.9-, and 1.5-fold lower, respectively, in women than in men. This suggests that while serum virus load may be as powerful a correlate of disease status in women as it is in men, the absolute values of the virus levels may be different in the 2 populations. These observations may have implications for the interpretation of levels of virus burden in women for the assessment of disease progression, transmission, and treatment.

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Evans, J. S., Nims, T., Cooley, J., Bradley, W., Jagodzinski, L., Zhou, S., … Vahey, M. (1997). Serum levels of virus burden in early-stage human immunodeficiency virus type 1 disease in women. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 175(4), 795–800. https://doi.org/10.1086/513973

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