Artigo Revisado por pares

Survival and Disease Progression According to Gender of Patients With HIV Infection

1994; American Medical Association; Volume: 272; Issue: 24 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1001/jama.1994.03520240043039

ISSN

1538-3598

Autores

Sandra Melnick, Renslow Sherer, Thomas A. Louis, David W. Hillman, Evelyn M. Rodriguez, C. Lackman, Linnea Capps, Lawrence S. Brown, Marcia Carlyn, Joyce A. Korvick, Lawrence Deyton, S. Johns, Jacquelyn Ellison, Micheal J. Hickson, Janet Lee, Melanie Thompson, Terri Creagh, Amy Morris, Jerome Ernst, Cathy L. Pollard, Kathryn Anastos, Mordechai Bar, Elizabeth Doramajian, David H. Blatt, David H. Moore, Renee Renzetti, Rita Verheggen, Roberta Luskin‐Hawk, Ramón A. Torres, David Townley, Kathleen Clanon, Bea Morris, William F. Owen, Carol Brosgart, Lawrence R. Crane, Jack R. Ebright, Paula Schuman, William Valuer, Colleen Fairclough, William J. Holloway, Dean L. Winslow, Susan Szabo, Arlene Bincsik, Karen R. Swanson, David L. Cohn, Randall Reves, Michael J. Grodesky, Carol A. Mesard, Joan E. Gans, Wafaa El‐Sadr, Cheryl Guity, Michelle Hardy, Luis Fuentes, Louis D. Saravolatz, Norman Markowitz, Jones Kumi, Diane Mastro-Polak, J Hutchinson, Janice Walker, Sue Pablovich, P Simmons, Nancy Kimmel, Jeffrey Kocher, Steven Weisholtz, Annemarie Sheridan, Victoria M. Taylor, Jilleen Braithwaite, James H. Sampson, Joel Godbey, Mark O. Loveless, Catherine Salveson, Norma Martínez, Thomas M. Kerkering, Carol Webster, Evelyn J. Fisher, Kurt Link, Lawrence W. Gernon, A Labriola, Cynthia L. Gibert, John W. Scott, Elizabeth Finley, Karen Irvin, James D. Neaton, Tim Brelje, Alain DuChêne, Bruce Thompson, Deborah Wentworth, Lawrence Deyton, Jane Sanvffle, Mary A. Foulkes,

Tópico(s)

HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk

Resumo

To compare disease progression and mortality between women and men infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).Multicenter cohort.Seventeen community-based centers participating in the Terry Beirn Community Programs for Clinical Research on AIDS (CPCRA).A total of 768 women and 3779 men enrolled in one or more of 11 protocols between September 7, 1990, and September 30, 1993.Survival and opportunistic events.The median CD4+ cell count at enrollment into the cohort was 0.240 x 10(9)/L (240/microL) for women and 0.137 x 10(9)/L for men (P < .001). Compared with men, women were younger (36 vs 38 years), more likely to be African American or Hispanic (78% vs 44%), and more likely to have reported a history of injection drug use (49% vs 27%). Women had been followed up for a median of 14.5 months and men for 15.5 months. The adjusted relative risk (RR) for death among women compared with men was 1.33 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06 to 1.67; P = .01) and for disease progression (including death) was 0.97 (95% CI, 0.82 to 1.15; P = .72). Women were at increased risk for bacterial pneumonia (RR, 1.38; 95% CI, 1.05 to 1.92) and at reduced risk for the development of Kaposi's sarcoma (RR, 0.16; 95% CI, 0.04 to 0.65) and oral hairy leukoplakia (RR, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.31 to 0.94). The increased risk of death and bacterial pneumonia for women compared with men was primarily evident among those with a history of injection drug use (RR, 1.68 for death, 95% CI, 1.20 to 2.35, P = .003; RR, 1.53 for bacterial pneumonia, 95% CI, 1.03 to 2.29, P = .04). Among patients without a history of disease progression at entry, death was the first event reported for more women than men (27.5% vs 12.2%).Compared with men, HIV-infected women in the CPCRA were at increased risk of death but not disease progression. Risks of most incident opportunistic diseases were similar for women and men; however, women were at an increased risk of bacterial pneumonia. These findings may reflect differential access to health care and standard treatments or different socioeconomic status and social support for women compared with men.

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