Abstract
BackgroundRecent papers have suggested that expanded combination antiretroviral treatment (cART) through lower viral load may be a strategy to reduce HIV transmission at a population level. We assessed calendar trends in detectable viral load in patients recruited to the Australian HIV Observational Database who were receiving cART.MethodsPatients were included in analyses if they had started cART (defined as three or more antiretrovirals) and had at least one viral load assessment after 1 January 1997. We analyzed detectable viral load (>400 copies/ml) in the first and second six months of each calendar year while receiving cART. Repeated measures logistic regression methods were used to account for within and between patient variability. Rates of detectable viral load were predicted allowing for patients lost to follow up.ResultsAnalyses were based on 2439 patients and 31,339 viral load assessments between 1 January 1997 and 31 March 2009. Observed detectable viral load in patients receiving cART declined to 5.3% in the first half of 2009. Predicted detectable viral load based on multivariate models, allowing for patient loss to follow up, also declined over time, but at higher levels, to 13.8% in 2009.ConclusionsPredicted detectable viral load in Australian HIV Observational Database patients receiving cART declined over calendar time, albeit at higher levels than observed. However, over this period, HIV diagnoses and estimated HIV incidence increased in Australia.
Highlights
Recent papers have suggested that expanded combination antiretroviral treatment through lower viral load may be a strategy to reduce HIV transmission at a population level
Predicted detectable viral load in Australian HIV Observational Database patients receiving combination antiretroviral treatment (cART) declined over calendar time, albeit at higher levels than observed
Over this period, HIV diagnoses and estimated HIV incidence increased in Australia
Summary
Recent papers have suggested that expanded combination antiretroviral treatment (cART) through lower viral load may be a strategy to reduce HIV transmission at a population level. There has been much interest recently in the role that combination antiretroviral treatment (cART) might have in decreasing HIV transmission at a population level. A key parameter in these mathematical modelling studies is the effect of cART on HIV viral load levels, with parameter estimates usually derived from cohort studies. Such parameter estimates from cohort studies are, often confounded with problems with missing data and patient loss to follow up
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