AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates disease progression in Asian patients with HIV-1 subtype D by analyzing CD4 T cell count decline compared to subtype B over an average of 96 months.
  • Results show that subtype D-infected individuals experienced a significantly higher annual decline in CD4 T cells and mortality rates, even after controlling for Korean Red Ginseng (KRG) treatment.
  • The findings suggest that subtype D infection is associated with over twice the risk of death and nearly three times the rate of disease progression compared to subtype B, regardless of KRG use.

Article Abstract

Background: To date, no study has described disease progression in Asian patients infected with HIV-1 subtype D.

Methods: To determine whether the disease progression differs in patients infected with subtypes D and B prior to starting combination antiretroviral therapy, the annual decline (AD) in CD4 T cell counts over 96 ± 59 months was retrospectively analyzed in 163 patients and compared in subtypes D and B based on the gene.

Results: CD4 T cell AD was significantly higher in the six subtype D-infected patients than in the 157 subtype B-infected patients irrespective of Korean Red Ginseng (KRG) treatment ( < 0.001). Of these, two subtype D-infected patients and 116 subtype B-infected patients had taken KRG. AD was significantly lower in patient in the KRG-treated group than in those in the KRG-naïve group irrespective of subtype ( < 0.05). To control for the effect of KRG, patients not treated with KRG were analyzed, with AD found to be significantly greater in subtype D-infected patients than in subtype B-infected patients ( < 0.01). KRG treatment had a greater effect on AD in subtype D-infected patients than in subtype B-infected patients (4.5-fold vs. 1.6-fold). Mortality rates were significantly higher in both the 45 KRG-naïve ( < 0.001) and all 163 ( < 0.01) patients infected with subtype D than subtype B.

Conclusion: Subtype D infection is associated with a >2-fold higher risk of death and a 2.9-fold greater rate of progression than subtype B, regardless of KRG treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6437552PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jgr.2018.07.006DOI Listing

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