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Journal Article
|Research

Gender differences in immune reconstitution: a multicentric cohort analysis in sub-saharan Africa

Maman D, Pujades-Rodriguez M, Subtil F, Pinoges LLP, McGuire M, Ecochard R, Etard JF
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Gender differences in immune reconstitution: a multicentric cohort analysis in sub-saharan Africa | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Abstract
BACKGROUND
In sub-Saharan Africa, men living with HIV often start ART at more advanced stages of disease and have higher early mortality than women. We investigated gender difference in long-term immune reconstitution.

METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS
Antiretroviral-naïve adults who received ART for at least 9 months in four HIV programs in sub-Saharan Africa were included. Multivariate mixed linear models were used to examine gender differences in immune reconstitution on first line ART. A total of 21,708 patients (68% women) contributed to 61,912 person-years of follow-up. At ART start,. Median CD4 at ART were 149 [IQR 85-206] for women and 125 cells/µL [IQR 63-187] for men. After the first year on ART, immune recovery was higher in women than in men, and gender-based differences increased by 20 CD4 cells/µL per year on average (95% CI 16-23; P<0.001). Up to 6 years after ART start, patients with low initial CD4 levels experienced similar gains compared to patients with high initial levels, including those with CD4>250 cells/µL (difference between patients with <50 cells/µL and those with >250 was 284 cells/µL; 95% CI 272-296; LR test for interaction with time p = 0.63). Among patients with initial CD4 count of 150-200 cells/µL, women reached 500 CD4 cells after 2.4 years on ART (95% CI 2.4-2.5) and men after 4.5 years (95% CI 4.1-4.8) of ART use.

CONCLUSION
Women achieved better long-term immune response to ART, reaching CD4 level associated with lower risks of AIDS related morbidity and mortality quicker than men.

Countries

Kenya Malawi Uganda

Subject Area

women's health

Languages

English
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0031078
Published Date
17 Feb 2012
PubMed ID
22363550
Journal
PLOS One
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages e31078
Issue Date
2012-02-17
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