Predictors of Virologic Failure in HIV/AIDS Patients Treated with Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Brasília, Brazil During 2002–2008

Authors

  • Edson José Monteiro Bello M.Sc. in Health Sciences, Nucleus of Virology, Central Public Health Laboratory, Brasilia, DF, Brazil, CEP 70830-010.
  • Amabel Fernandes Correia M.Sc in Health Sciences Nucleus of Parasitology, Central Public Health Laboratory, Brasilia, DF, Brazil, CEP 70830-010.
  • José Ricardo Pio Marins Ph.D Secretary of State for Health, Federal District, Central Public Health Laboratory, Federal District, Brasília, DF, Brazil, CEP 70058-900.
  • Edgar Merchan-Hamann Ph.D Departament of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Brasília, DF, Brazil, CEP 70910-900.
  • Luis Isamu Barros Kanzaki D.Sc. Laboratory of Bioprospection, University of Brasilia, Brasília, DF, Brazil, CEP 70910-900.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33393/dti.2011.1371

Keywords:

antiretroviral therapy, tuberculosis coinfection, Brasilia, epidemiology

Abstract

Little data exists concerning the efficacy of the antiretroviral therapy in the Federal District in Brazil, therefore in order to improve HIV/AIDS patients’ therapy and to pinpoint hot spots in the treatment, this research work was conducted. Of 139 HIV/AIDS patients submitted to the highly active antiretroviral therapy, 12.2% failed virologically. The significant associated factors related to unresponsiveness to the lentiviral treatment were: patients’ place of origin (OR = 3.28; IC95% = 1.0–9.73; P = 0.032) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection (RR = 2.90; IC95% = 1.19–7.02; P = 0.019). In the logistic regression analysis, the remaining variables in the model were: patients’ birthplace (OR = 3.28; IC95% = 1.10–9.73; P = 0.032) and tuberculosis comorbidity (OR = 3.82; IC95% = 1.19–12.22; P = 0.024). The patients enrolled in this survey had an 88.0% therapeutic success rate for the maximum period of one year of treatment, predicting that T CD4+ low values and elevated viral loads at pretreatment should be particularly considered in tuberculosis coinfection, besides the availability of new antiretroviral drugs displaying optimal activity both in viral suppression and immunological reconstitution.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2011-11-24

How to Cite

Bello, E. J. M., Correia, A. F., Marins, J. R. P., Merchan-Hamann, E., & Kanzaki, L. I. B. (2011). Predictors of Virologic Failure in HIV/AIDS Patients Treated with Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Brasília, Brazil During 2002–2008. Drug Target Insights, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.33393/dti.2011.1371

Issue

Section

Original Research Article

Metrics