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    Ann Intern Med. 2008 Feb 5;148(3):178-85.

    Influence of alternative thresholds for initiating HIV treatment on quality-adjusted life expectancy: a decision model.

    Source

    Yale University and Veterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut 06516, USA. Ronald.Braithwaite@va.gov

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    The optimal threshold for initiating HIV treatment is unclear.

    OBJECTIVE:

    To compare different thresholds for initiating HIV treatment.

    DESIGN:

    A validated computer simulation was used to weigh important harms from earlier initiation of antiretroviral therapy (toxicity, side effects, and resistance accumulation) against important benefits (decreased HIV-related mortality).

    DATA SOURCES:

    Veterans Aging Cohort Study (5742 HIV-infected patients and 11 484 matched uninfected controls) and published reports.

    TARGET POPULATION:

    Individuals with newly diagnosed chronic HIV infection and varying viral loads (10,000, 30,000, 100,000, and 300,000 copies/mL) and ages (30, 40, and 50 years).

    TIME HORIZON:

    Unlimited.

    PERSPECTIVE:

    Societal.

    INTERVENTION:

    Alternative thresholds for initiating antiretroviral therapy (CD4 counts of 200, 350, and 500 cells/mm3).

    OUTCOME MEASURES:

    Life-years and quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs).

    RESULTS OF BASE-CASE ANALYSIS:

    Although the simulation was biased against earlier treatment initiation because it used an upper-bound assumption for therapy-related toxicity, earlier treatment increased life expectancy and QALYs at age 30 years regardless of viral load (life expectancies with CD4 initiation thresholds of 500, 350, and 200 cells/mm3 were 18.2 years, 17.6 years, and 17.2 years, respectively, for a viral load of 10,000 copies/mL and 17.3 years, 15.9 years, and 14.5 years, respectively, for a viral load of 300,000 copies/mL), and increased life expectancies at age 40 years if viral loads were greater than 30 000 copies/mL (life expectancies were 12.5 years, 12.0 years, and 11.4 years, respectively, for a viral load of 300,000 copies/mL).

    RESULTS OF SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS:

    Findings favoring early treatment were generally robust.

    LIMITATIONS:

    Results favoring later treatment may not be valid. The findings may not be generalizable to women.

    CONCLUSION:

    This simulation suggests that earlier initiation of combination antiretroviral therapy is often favored compared with current recommendations.

    PMID:
    18252681
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC3124094
    Free PMC Article

    Images from this publication.See all images (4) Free text

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    Appendix Figure 1
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    Appendix Figure 2

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