Lindan C P, Allen S, Serufilira A, Lifson A R, Van de Perre P, Chen-Rundle A, Batungwanayo J, Nsengumuremyi F, Bogaerts J, Hulley S
Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California at San Francisco.
Ann Intern Med. 1992 Feb 15;116(4):320-8. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-116-4-320.
To better characterize the natural history of disease due to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in African women.
Prospective cohort study over a 2-year follow-up period.
A total of 460 HIV-seropositive women and a comparison cohort of HIV-seronegative women recruited from prenatal and pediatric clinics in Kigali, Rwanda in 1988.
Clinical signs and symptoms of HIV disease, AIDS, and mortality.
Follow-up data at 2 years were available for 93% of women who were still alive. At enrollment, many seropositive women reported symptoms listed in the World Health Organization (WHO) clinical case definition of AIDS, but these were nonspecific and often improved over time. The 2-year mortality among HIV-infected women by Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was 7% (95% CI, 5% to 10%) overall, and 21% (CI, 8% to 34%) for the 40 women who fulfilled the WHO case definition of AIDS at entry. In comparison, the 2-year mortality in women not infected with HIV was only 0.3% (CI, 0% to 7%). Independent baseline predictors of mortality in seropositive women by Cox proportional hazards modeling were, in order of descending risk factor prevalence: a body mass index of 21 kg/m2 or less (relative hazard, 2.3; CI, 1.1 to 4.8), low income (relative hazard, 2.3; CI, 1.1 to 4.5), an erythrocyte sedimentation rate exceeding 60 mm/h (relative hazard, 4.9; CI, 2.2 to 10.9), chronic diarrhea (relative hazard, 2.6; CI, 1.1 to 5.7), a history of herpes zoster (relative hazard 5.3; CI, 2.5 to 11.4), and oral candida (relative hazard, 7.3; CI, 1.6 to 33.3). Human immunodeficiency virus disease was the cause of death in 38 of the 39 HIV-positive women who died, but only 25 met the WHO definition of AIDS before death.
Human immunodeficiency virus disease now accounts for 90% of all deaths among child-bearing urban Rwandan women. Many symptomatic seropositive patients may show some clinical improvement and should not be denied routine medical care. Easily diagnosed signs and symptoms and inexpensive laboratory tests can be used in Africa to identify those patients with a particularly good or bad prognosis.
更好地描述非洲女性感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)后的疾病自然史。
为期2年随访期的前瞻性队列研究。
1988年从卢旺达基加利的产前和儿科诊所招募的460名HIV血清阳性女性以及HIV血清阴性女性组成的对照队列。
HIV疾病、艾滋病的临床体征和症状以及死亡率。
93%仍存活的女性有2年的随访数据。入组时,许多血清阳性女性报告了世界卫生组织(WHO)艾滋病临床病例定义中列出的症状,但这些症状不具特异性,且往往随时间改善。通过Kaplan-Meier生存分析,HIV感染女性的2年总死亡率为7%(95%CI,5%至10%),入组时符合WHO艾滋病病例定义的40名女性的2年死亡率为21%(CI,8%至34%)。相比之下,未感染HIV的女性2年死亡率仅为0.3%(CI,0%至7%)。通过Cox比例风险模型分析,血清阳性女性死亡率的独立基线预测因素按危险因素患病率从高到低依次为:体重指数为21kg/m2或更低(相对风险,2.3;CI,1.1至4.8)、低收入(相对风险,2.3;CI,1.1至4.5)、红细胞沉降率超过60mm/h(相对风险,4.9;CI,2.2至10.9)、慢性腹泻(相对风险,2.6;CI,1.1至5.7)、带状疱疹病史(相对风险5.3;CI,2.5至11.4)以及口腔念珠菌感染(相对风险,7.3;CI,1.6至33.3)。在39名死亡的HIV阳性女性中,38例死于HIV疾病,但只有25例在死前符合WHO艾滋病定义。
HIV疾病目前占卢旺达城市育龄女性所有死亡病例的90%。许多有症状的血清阳性患者可能会有一些临床改善,不应被拒绝常规医疗护理。在非洲,可以使用易于诊断的体征和症状以及廉价的实验室检查来识别那些预后特别好或特别差的患者。