Human immunodeficiency virus infection in haemophiliacs in Taiwan: the importance of CD4 lymphocyte count in the progression to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
Shen, M.C.; Hu, F.C.; Lin, J.S.; Hsie, S.W.; Hung, C.C.; Chung, C.Y.
Haemophilia the Official Journal of the World Federation of Hemophilia 4(2): 115-121
1998
ISSN/ISBN: 1351-8216 PMID: 9873849 DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2516.1998.00156.xDocument Number: 524292
From July 1984 to December 1996, we tested and studied 303 haemophilic patients for the infection of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Among the 261 haemophilia A patients 44 were HIV positive (16.9%), while none of the haemophilia B patients was HIV positive. The mean age of the 44 HIV-seropositive patients in 1984 was 20.6 years (2-37 years). Seven who had known seroconversion dates and 29 whose first seropositive dates were known seroconverted before 1986. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has developed in 16 patients, nine of whom presented with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, three with tuberculosis infection, and 13 had died. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of the progression rate to AIDS after the date of first seropositive test is about 30% at the 10th year. The median survival time after development of AIDS obtained from the Kaplan-Meier estimate of the survival curve was 11.7 months. Statistical analysis for the covariate effects on the risk of developing AIDS by the Cox proportional hazards model revealed that there was a statistically significant negative association of the risk for progression to AIDS with the logarithm of initial CD4 cell counts (P = 0.027) and the rate of decline of CD4 cell counts (P = 0.040), but not with age (P = 0.650). In conclusion, the clinical characteristics of AIDS haemophiliacs in Taiwan were not different from that observed in western countries. Low initial CD4 cell count and sharp decline in CD4 cell counts, but not age, increased the risk of progression to AIDS.