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CD4 cell
reconstitution is significantly slower in older patients
Graham
McKerrow, HIV i-Base

An analysis
of 2,614 antiretroviral naïve people under 50 years of age, and 401
over that age, who started on HAART in France between 1997 and 2001, reveals
that patients over 50 exhibit an immune response after HAART, but that
their CD4 cell reconstitution was significantly slower than in younger
patients. The researchers conclude that this may explain why older patients
have a higher risk of clinical progression.
Using information
from the French Hospital Database on HIV, patients were divided into two
groups: over and under 50. Among patients with baseline HIV viral load
below 100,000 copies/ml, in the first six months the CD4 count increase
was +17.3 cells/month in the younger group, versus +14.1 cells/month in
the older group and thereafter was +11.1 cells/month in the younger group,
versus +9.8 cells/month in the older group. Among patients with baseline
viral load over 100,000 copies/ml, it was respectively, +42.9 versus +36.9
cells/month in the first six months versus +17.9 cells/month +15.6 cells/month
thereafter. All these differences were highly statistically significant
(all = p<0.0001).
Within a
median period of time of 31.5 months, 263 patients had a new AIDS-defining
disease and 44 patients died. After adjustments for baseline characteristics,
the hazard ratio of clinical progression was significantly higher in the
older group as compared with the younger group: HR=1.52, IC95=1.1–2.00.
Ref: Grabar S,
Kousignian I, Sobel A et al. Immunological and clinical responses to
HAART over 50 years of age, results from the French Hospital Database
on HIV. Abstract 85.
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