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Changing Mortality Profile among HIV-Infected Patients in Rio de Janeiro,Brazil: Shifting from AIDS to Non-AIDS Related Conditions in the HAART Era
Authors:Beatriz Grinsztejn  Paula M. Luz  Antonio G. Pacheco  Desiree V. G. Santos  Luciane Velasque  Ronaldo I. Moreira  Maria Regina C. Guimar?es  Estev?o P. Nunes  Alberto S. Lemos  Sayonara R. Ribeiro  Dayse P. Campos  Marco A. A. Vitoria  Valdilea G. Veloso
Affiliation:1. Instituto de Pesquisa Clínica Evandro Chagas, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.; 2. Programa de Computação Científica, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.; 3. Departamento de Matemática e Estatística, Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.; 4. HIV Department, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.; Hopital Bichat Claude Bernard, France,
Abstract:

Introduction

We describe temporal trends in the mortality rates and factors associated with AIDS and non-AIDS related mortality at the Evandro Chagas Clinical Research Institute (IPEC), Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (FIOCRUZ).

Methods

Adult patients enrolling from 1986 through 2009 with a minimum follow up of 60 days were included. Vital status was exhaustively checked using patients’ medical charts, through active contact with individuals and family members and by linkage with the Rio de Janeiro Mortality database using a previously validated algorithm. The CoDe protocol was used to establish the cause of death. Extended Cox proportional hazards models were used for multivariate modeling.

Results

A total of 3530 individuals met the inclusion criteria, out of which 868 (24.6%) deceased; median follow up per patient was 3.9 years (interquartile range 1.7–9.2 years). The dramatic decrease in the overall mortality rates was driven by AIDS-related causes that decreased from 9.19 deaths/100PYs n 1986–1991 to 1.35/100PYs in 2007–2009. Non-AIDS related mortality rates remained stable overtime, at around 1 death/100PYs. Immunodeficiency significantly increased the hazard of both AIDS-related and non-AIDS-related causes of death, while HAART use was strongly associated with a lower hazard of death from either cause.

Conclusions

Our results confirm the remarkable decrease in AIDS-related mortality as the HIV epidemic evolved and alerts to the conditions not traditionally related to HIV/AIDS which are now becoming more frequent, needing careful monitoring.
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