Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess the positive predictive value (PPV) of a clinical score for viral failure among patients fulfilling the WHO-criteria for anti-retroviral treatment (ART) failure in rural Lesotho.MethodsPatients fulfilling clinical and/or immunological WHO failure-criteria were enrolled. The score includes the following predictors: Prior ART exposure (1 point), CD4-count below baseline (1), 25% and 50% drop from peak CD4-count (1 and 2), hemoglobin drop≥1 g/dL (1), CD4 count<100/µl after 12 months (1), new onset papular pruritic eruption (1), and adherence<95% (3). A nurse assessed the score the day blood was drawn for viral load (VL). Reported confidence intervals (CI) were calculated using Wilsons method.ResultsAmong 1'131 patients on ART≥6 months, 134 (11.8%) had immunological and/or clinical failure, 104 (78%) had blood drawn (13 died, 10 lost to follow-up, 7 did not show up). From 92 (88%) a result could be obtained (2 samples hemolysed, 10 lost). Out of these 92 patients 47 (51%) had viral failure (≥5000 copies), 27 (29%) viral suppression (<40) and 18 (20%) intermediate viremia (40–4999). Overall, 20 (22%) had a score≥5. A score≥5 had a PPV of 100% to detect a VL>40 copies (95%CI: 84–100), and of 90% to detect a VL≥5000 copies (70–97). Within the score, adherence<95%, CD4-count<100/µl and papular pruritic eruption were the strongest single predictors. Among 47 patients failing, 8 (17%) died before or within 4 weeks after being switched. Overall mortality was 4 (20%) among those with score≥5 and 4 (5%) if score<5 (OR 4.3; 95%CI: 0.96–18.84, p = 0.057).ConclusionA score≥5 among patients fulfilling WHO-criteria had a PPV of 100% for a detectable VL and 90% for viral failure. In settings without regular access to VL-testing, this PPV may be considered high enough to switch this patient-group to second-line treatment without confirmatory VL-test.

Highlights

  • Identifying patients failing on first-line treatment is a major challenge in anti-retroviral treatment (ART) programs in resourcelimited settings

  • Study objectives and design The primary objective of this cross-sectional study was to determine the positive predictive value (PPV) of a clinical score for viral failure among patients on first-line ART who fulfill the clinical and/or immunological World Health Organization (WHO)-criteria for treatment failure in rural Lesotho

  • Of the 92 patients enrolled in the study, 75 (82%) had only immunological failure, 1 had only clinical failure and 16 (17%) fulfilled immunological as well as clinical WHO criteria for treatment failure

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Summary

Introduction

Identifying patients failing on first-line treatment is a major challenge in anti-retroviral treatment (ART) programs in resourcelimited settings. As a result patients who are failing on a first-line regimen are often not or not timely switched to a second-line regimen [1]. This leads to a high mortality among patients who fail on first-line ART [1,2,3]. A confirmatory viral load (VL) measurement is recommended, before any switch to second-line can be considered [5,6,7,8]. In many settings access to viral load testing is difficult and is causing delays in treatment switch

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