Background: We evaluate differences in timing of cART (combined antiretroviral treatment) initiation by geographical origin in male and female HIV-positive patients in the Collaboration of Observational HIV Epidemiological Research Europe, a large European Collaboration of HIV Cohorts. Methods: We included individuals recruited in Western Europe between January 1997 and March 2013, with known geographical origin and at least 1 CD4+cell count measurement while cART-naive. Timing of cART was assessed through modified time-to-event methods, in which a scale of CD4+cell counts was used instead of time, with cART being the outcome. We estimated the median CD4+cell count at cART initiation (estimated CD4+levels at which the probability of having started cART is 50%) using Kaplan-Meier and adjusted hazard ratios of cART initiation using Cox regression. Results: Of 151674 individuals, 110592 (72.9%) were men. Median (95% confidence interval) CD4+cell count falls far below 250 cells/μl in all groups and was lowest in sub-Saharan African [SSA: 161 (158-167)], Caribbean men [161 (150-174)] and in Asian women [Asian Continent and Oceania: 185 (165-197)]. Among men, the adjusted probability of cART initiation was lower in migrants compared with natives, but differences depended on initial CD4+cell count. For example, in the group with more than 500 CD4+at recruitment, they were 45% (36-53%), 30% (17-40%) and 25% (19-30%) lower for Caribbean, Eastern European and SSA men, respectively. In women, no meaningful differences were observed between natives and most migrant groups. However, SSA women had a 31% (24-38%) higher probability of cART initiation when recruited at a CD4+more than 500 cells/μl and 9% (4-14%) lower when recruited at CD4+less than 100 cells/μl. Conclusion: Most migrant men initiate cART at lower CD4+cell count than natives, whereas this does not hold for migrant women.

Timing of combined antiretroviral treatment initiation in male and female migrants living with HIV in Western Europe

Saracino A;
2017-01-01

Abstract

Background: We evaluate differences in timing of cART (combined antiretroviral treatment) initiation by geographical origin in male and female HIV-positive patients in the Collaboration of Observational HIV Epidemiological Research Europe, a large European Collaboration of HIV Cohorts. Methods: We included individuals recruited in Western Europe between January 1997 and March 2013, with known geographical origin and at least 1 CD4+cell count measurement while cART-naive. Timing of cART was assessed through modified time-to-event methods, in which a scale of CD4+cell counts was used instead of time, with cART being the outcome. We estimated the median CD4+cell count at cART initiation (estimated CD4+levels at which the probability of having started cART is 50%) using Kaplan-Meier and adjusted hazard ratios of cART initiation using Cox regression. Results: Of 151674 individuals, 110592 (72.9%) were men. Median (95% confidence interval) CD4+cell count falls far below 250 cells/μl in all groups and was lowest in sub-Saharan African [SSA: 161 (158-167)], Caribbean men [161 (150-174)] and in Asian women [Asian Continent and Oceania: 185 (165-197)]. Among men, the adjusted probability of cART initiation was lower in migrants compared with natives, but differences depended on initial CD4+cell count. For example, in the group with more than 500 CD4+at recruitment, they were 45% (36-53%), 30% (17-40%) and 25% (19-30%) lower for Caribbean, Eastern European and SSA men, respectively. In women, no meaningful differences were observed between natives and most migrant groups. However, SSA women had a 31% (24-38%) higher probability of cART initiation when recruited at a CD4+more than 500 cells/μl and 9% (4-14%) lower when recruited at CD4+less than 100 cells/μl. Conclusion: Most migrant men initiate cART at lower CD4+cell count than natives, whereas this does not hold for migrant women.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11586/203431
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