Cox Janneke A, Kiggundu Daniel, Elpert Lana, Meintjes Graeme, Colebunders Robert, Alamo Stella
Department of Clinical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium.
Department of Medicine, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
BMJ Open. 2016 Jan 6;6(1):e008718. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008718.
To study temporal trends of mortality in HIV-infected adults who attended an HIV clinic in Kampala, Uganda, between 2002 and 2012.
Descriptive retrospective study.
Two doctors independently reviewed the clinic database that contained information derived from the clinic files and assigned one or more causes of death to each patient >18 years of age with a known date of death. Four cause-of-death categories were defined: 'communicable conditions and AIDS-defining malignancies', 'chronic non-communicable conditions', 'other non-communicable conditions' and 'unknown'. Trends in cause-of-death categories over time were evaluated using multinomial logistic regression with year of death as an independent continuous variable.
1028 deaths were included; 38% of these individuals were on antiretroviral therapy (ART). The estimated mortality rate dropped from 21.86 deaths/100 person years of follow-up (PYFU) in 2002 to 1.75/100 PYFU in 2012. There was a significant change in causes of death over time (p<0.01). Between 2002 and 2012, the proportion of deaths due to 'communicable conditions and AIDS-defining malignancies' decreased from 84% (95% CI 74% to 90%) to 64% (95% CI 53% to 74%) and the proportion of deaths due to 'chronic non-communicable conditions', 'other non-communicable conditions' and a combination of 'communicable and non-communicable conditions' increased. Tuberculosis (TB) was the main cause of death (34%). Death from TB decreased over time, from 43% (95% CI 32% to 53%) in 2002 to a steady proportion of approximately 25% from 2006 onwards (p<0.01).
Mortality rate decreased over time. The proportion of deaths from communicable conditions and AIDS-defining malignancies decreased and from non-communicable diseases, both chronic and non-chronic, increased. Nevertheless, communicable conditions and AIDS-defining malignancies continued to cause the majority of deaths, with TB as the main cause. Ongoing monitoring of cause of death is warranted and strategies to decrease mortality from TB and other common opportunistic infections are essential.
研究2002年至2012年间在乌干达坎帕拉一家艾滋病诊所就诊的感染艾滋病毒成年人的死亡率随时间的变化趋势。
描述性回顾性研究。
两名医生独立查阅诊所数据库,该数据库包含从诊所档案中获取的信息,并为每名已知死亡日期且年龄大于18岁的患者确定一种或多种死亡原因。定义了四类死亡原因:“传染病及艾滋病界定恶性肿瘤”、“慢性非传染病”、“其他非传染病”和“不明原因”。使用以死亡年份作为独立连续变量的多项逻辑回归评估死亡原因类别随时间的变化趋势。
纳入1028例死亡病例;其中38%的个体接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)。估计死亡率从2002年的21.86例死亡/100人年随访(PYFU)降至2012年的1.75/100 PYFU。死亡原因随时间有显著变化(p<0.01)。2002年至2012年间,“传染病及艾滋病界定恶性肿瘤”导致的死亡比例从84%(95%CI 74%至90%)降至64%(95%CI 53%至74%),“慢性非传染病”、“其他非传染病”以及“传染病和非传染病合并”导致的死亡比例增加。结核病(TB)是主要死亡原因(34%)。TB导致的死亡随时间减少,从2002年的43%(95%CI 32%至53%)降至2006年起稳定在约25%的比例(p<0.01)。
死亡率随时间下降。传染病及艾滋病界定恶性肿瘤导致的死亡比例下降,慢性和非慢性非传染病导致的死亡比例增加。然而,传染病及艾滋病界定恶性肿瘤仍是主要死因,其中TB最为常见。有必要持续监测死亡原因,采取策略降低TB及其他常见机会性感染导致的死亡率至关重要。