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Hepatitis B and C Co-Infection in HIV Patients from the TREAT Asia HIV Observational Database: Analysis of Risk Factors and Survival
Authors:Marcelo Chen  Wing-Wai Wong  Matthew G. Law  Sasisopin Kiertiburanakul  Evy Yunihastuti  Tuti Parwati Merati  Poh Lian Lim  Romanee Chaiwarith  Praphan Phanuphak  Man Po Lee  Nagalingeswaran Kumarasamy  Vonthanak Saphonn  Rossana Ditangco  Benedict L. H. Sim  Kinh Van Nguyen  Sanjay Pujari  Adeeba Kamarulzaman  Fujie Zhang  Thuy Thanh Pham  Jun Yong Choi  Shinichi Oka  Pacharee Kantipong  Mahiran Mustafa  Winai Ratanasuwan  Nicolas Durier  Yi-Ming Arthur Chen
Abstract:

Background

We assessed the effects of hepatitis B (HBV) or hepatitis C (HCV) co-infection on outcomes of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in HIV-infected patients enrolled in the TREAT Asia HIV Observational Database (TAHOD), a multi-center cohort of HIV-infected patients in the Asia-Pacific region.

Methods

Patients testing HBs antigen (Ag) or HCV antibody (Ab) positive within enrollment into TAHOD were considered HBV or HCV co-infected. Factors associated with HBV and/or HCV co-infection were assessed by logistic regression models. Factors associated with post-ART HIV immunological response (CD4 change after six months) and virological response (HIV RNA <400 copies/ml after 12 months) were also determined. Survival was assessed by the Kaplan-Meier method and log rank test.

Results

A total of 7,455 subjects were recruited by December 2012. Of patients tested, 591/5656 (10.4%) were HBsAg positive, 794/5215 (15.2%) were HCVAb positive, and 88/4966 (1.8%) were positive for both markers. In multivariate analysis, HCV co-infection, age, route of HIV infection, baseline CD4 count, baseline HIV RNA, and HIV-1 subtype were associated with immunological recovery. Age, route of HIV infection, baseline CD4 count, baseline HIV RNA, ART regimen, prior ART and HIV-1 subtype, but not HBV or HCV co-infection, affected HIV RNA suppression. Risk factors affecting mortality included HCV co-infection, age, CDC stage, baseline CD4 count, baseline HIV RNA and prior mono/dual ART. Shortest survival was seen in subjects who were both HBV- and HCV-positive.

Conclusion

In this Asian cohort of HIV-infected patients, HCV co-infection, but not HBV co-infection, was associated with lower CD4 cell recovery after ART and increased mortality.
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