Warning: The NCBI web site requires JavaScript to function. more...
Academic Department of Haematology, Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, London.
112 haemophilic patients infected with HIV were followed up with clinical and laboratory assessment between 1 December 1979 and 30 November 1988. Sixty-six (59%) of the patients developed HIV-related clinical symptoms and 22 (20%) developed AIDS. Twenty (18%) of the patients developed p24 antigenaemia. Amongst the 59 patients whose date of seroconversion could be estimated the calculated 8-year cumulative incidence of AIDS was 40% (symptoms 73%). For the whole cohort of 112 patients, the median slope of linear regression of the absolute T4 lymphocyte count was steeper for those with AIDS (-0.113 x 10(9)/l per year) than for those without AIDS (-0.054 x 10(9)/l per year) (P less than 0.02). While 15 cases of AIDS developed during 58 patient-years of follow up after falling below a T4 lymphocyte count of 0.2 x 10(9)/l, only two cases occurred during 450 patient-years before reaching this count. Thus the decline of the T4 lymphocyte count to 0.2 x 10(9)/l may be an appropriate additional end-point for the assessment of new treatments for asymptomatic patients infected with HIV.
Your browsing activity is empty.
Activity recording is turned off.
Turn recording back on