Department of Psychiatry 0680, University of California/San Diego, Clinical Sciences Building, 9500 Gilman Drive, 92093-0680, La Jolla, CA.
Ann Behav Med. 1996 Mar;18(1):30-9. doi: 10.1007/BF02903937.
Based on the existing empirical evidence that psychosocial variables may predict the course of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) illness, disease progression (described by advance in symptoms, decline in CD4+ cell count, and mortality) in 414 HIV-positive (HIV+) males was studied using Cox Proportional Hazards Models (survival analysis). Depressive symptoms predicted shorter longevity after controlling for symptoms and CD4+ cell count. Large social network sizes predicted longevity among those with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-defining symptoms at baseline, but not among other subjects. Therefore, psychosocial variables and affective states may be related to disease outcome only during later stages of HIV disease. Although the results provide support for psychoneuroimmunologic effects in HIV, other confounding explanations may still apply.
基于心理社会变量可能预测人类免疫缺陷病毒 (HIV) 疾病进程的现有经验证据,采用 Cox 比例风险模型(生存分析)研究了 414 名 HIV 阳性 (HIV+) 男性的疾病进展(表现为症状加重、CD4+细胞计数下降和死亡率增加)。在控制症状和 CD4+细胞计数后,抑郁症状预测寿命较短。在基线时具有获得性免疫缺陷综合征 (AIDS) 定义症状的人群中,大的社交网络规模预测寿命较长,但在其他人群中则不然。因此,心理社会变量和情感状态可能仅与 HIV 疾病的后期阶段的疾病结果有关。尽管结果支持 HIV 中的心理神经免疫学效应,但可能仍然存在其他混杂解释。