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Causes and timing of mortality and morbidity among late presenters starting Antiretroviral therapy in the REALITY Trial

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dc.contributor.author Post, Frank A.
dc.contributor.author Szubert, Alexander J.
dc.contributor.author Prendergast, Andrew J.
dc.contributor.author Johnston, Victoria
dc.contributor.author Lyall, Hermione
dc.contributor.author Fitzgerald, Felicity
dc.contributor.author Musoro, Godfrey
dc.contributor.author Musiime, Victor
dc.contributor.author Chepkorir, Priscilla
dc.contributor.author Agutu, Clara
dc.contributor.author Mallewa, Jane
dc.contributor.author Rajapakse, Chathurika
dc.contributor.author Wilkes, Helen
dc.contributor.author Hakim, James
dc.contributor.author Mugyenyi, Peter
dc.contributor.author Walker, Sarah
dc.contributor.author Gibb, Diana M.
dc.contributor.author Pett, Sarah L.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-07-27T07:51:51Z
dc.date.available 2023-07-27T07:51:51Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/7885
dc.description.abstract Background. In sub-Saharan Africa, 20%–25% of people starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) have severe immunosuppression; approximately 10% die within 3 months. In the Reduction of EArly mortaLITY (REALITY) randomized trial, a broad enhanced anti-infection prophylaxis bundle reduced mortality vs cotrimoxazole. We investigate the contribution and timing of different causes of mortality/morbidity. Methods. Participants started ART with a CD4 count <100 cells/μL; enhanced prophylaxis comprised cotrimoxazole plus 12 weeks of isoniazid + fluconazole, single-dose albendazole, and 5 days of azithromycin. A blinded committee adjudicated events and causes of death as (non–mutually exclusively) tuberculosis, cryptococcosis, severe bacterial infection (SBI), other potentially azith- romycin-responsive infections, other events, and unknown. Results. Median pre-ART CD4 count was 37 cells/μL. Among 1805 participants, 225 (12.7%) died by week 48. Fatal/nonfatal events occurred early (median 4 weeks); rates then declined exponentially. One hundred fifty-four deaths had single and 71 had multiple causes, including tuberculosis in 4.5% participants, cryptococcosis in 1.1%, SBI in 1.9%, other potentially azithromycin-re- sponsive infections in 1.3%, other events in 3.6%, and unknown in 5.0%. Enhanced prophylaxis reduced deaths from cryptococcosis and unknown causes (P < .05) but not tuberculosis, SBI, potentially azithromycin-responsive infections, or other causes (P > .3); and reduced nonfatal/fatal tuberculosis and cryptococcosis (P < .05), but not SBI, other potentially azithromycin-responsive infections, or other events (P > .2). Conclusions. Enhanced prophylaxis reduced mortality from cryptococcosis and unknown causes and nonfatal tuberculosis and cryptococcosis. High early incidence of fatal/nonfatal events highlights the need for starting enhanced-prophylaxis with ART in advanced disease. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Oxford University Press en_US
dc.subject HIV en_US
dc.subject Antiretroviral therapy en_US
dc.subject Mortality en_US
dc.subject Morbidity en_US
dc.title Causes and timing of mortality and morbidity among late presenters starting Antiretroviral therapy in the REALITY Trial en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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