Early mortality among adults accessing a community-based antiretroviral service in South Africa: implications for programme design
2005; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 19; Issue: 18 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1097/01.aids.0000194802.89540.e1
ISSN1473-5571
AutoresStephen D Lawn, Landon Myer, Catherine Orrell, Linda‐Gail Bekker, Robin Wood,
Tópico(s)Global Maternal and Child Health
ResumoTo determine rates, risk factors and causes of death among patients accessing a community-based antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme both prior to and following initiation of treatment.All in-programme deaths were ascertained between September 2002 and March 2005 among treatment-naive patients enrolled into a prospective community-based ART cohort in Cape Town, South Africa.Of 712 patients (median CD4 cell count, 94 cells/microl), 578 (81%) started triple ART a median of 29 days after enrollment. 68 (9.5%) patients died during 563 person-years of observation. The high pretreatment mortality rate of 35.6 deaths/100 person-years [95% confidence interval (CI), 23.0-55.1) decreased to 2.5/100 person-years (95% CI, 0.9-6.6) at 1 year among those who received ART. However, within the first 90 days from enrollment, 29 of 44 (66%) deaths occurred among patients awaiting ART; these would not be identified by an on-treatment analysis. Multivariate analysis showed that risk of death (both pre-treatment and on-treatment) was independently associated with baseline CD4 cell count and World Health Organization (WHO) clinical stage; stage 4 disease was the strongest risk factor. Major attributed causes of death were wasting syndrome, tuberculosis, acute bacterial infections, malignancy and immune reconstitution disease.Most early in-programme deaths occurred among patients with advanced immunodeficiency but who had not yet started ART. Programme evaluation using on-treatment analyses greatly underestimated early mortality. This mortality would be reduced by minimizing unnecessary in-programme delays in treatment initiation and by starting ART before development of WHO stage 4 disease.
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