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Challenges to replacing CD4 testing with viroloigical monitoring. Andrew Hill, Pharmacology Research Laboratories, University of Liverpool, UK. World AIDS Conference, Washington, USA, July 2012 [MSF Satellite]. HIV RNA and CD4 counts. CD4 counts
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Challenges to replacing CD4 testing with viroloigical monitoring Andrew Hill, Pharmacology Research Laboratories, University of Liverpool, UK World AIDS Conference, Washington, USA, July 2012 [MSF Satellite]
HIV RNA and CD4 counts • CD4 counts • show which asymptomatic patients should be started on antiretroviral treatment (<350 or <500 cells/µL in different guidelines) • Guide to prophylaxis for opportunistic infections (<200 cells/uL) • HIV RNA • much more sensitive than CD4 count, as a measure of treatment failure. • predictsrisk of HIV transmission, • predicts emergence of drug resistance • can be a marker of poor adherence
Questions • If a patient has CD4 counts above 350 cells/µL and HIV RNA <50 copies/mL, what is the use of continued CD4 testing? • Can we monitor with HIV RNA alone during long-term antiretroviral treatment?
CD4 counts over 144 weeks in one patient, while HIV RNA <50 (MONET trial) CD4 count cells/uL If the baseline CD4 count is above 350 cells/uL, will the CD4 counts always stay above 200cells/uL, while the HIV RNA is suppressed? CD4 count below 200 cells/µL: higher risk of AIDS Weeks on treatment (HIV RNA <50 copies/mL)
Can we monitor with HIV RNA alone? • Research question – while HIV RNA remained suppressed, did patients always keep CD4 counts at safe levels (i.e. above 200 cells/µL)? • In the MONET trial, 256 patients with HIV RNA <50 copies/mL at screening were treated with DRV/r + 2NRTI or DRV/r monotherapy, for 144 weeks. • CD4 counts were measured at a central laboratory, at screening, baseline, then every 12-16 weeks up to Week 144. • In this analysis, we compared the CD4 counts at baseline with the lowest CD4 counts seen during 144 weeks of treatment, while the HIV RNA stayed below 50 copies/mL.
MONET 144 weeks:CD4 count by study visit Mean CD4 cell count (+/-SD) J Arribas et al. HIV Medicine 2012 [published ahead of print]
Over three years, only 2/230 patients showed a fall in CD4 <200 cells/uL, while HIV RNA was <50 copies/mL CD4 counts at screening/baseline versus lowest CD4 count during treatment
Patient #1 with short-term CD4 decline below 200 From baseline to Week 144, HIV RNA was <50 copies/mL No change in treatment CD4 percentage remained in the range of 24-30% CD4 count cells/uL Weeks on treatment (HIV RNA <50 copies/mL)
Patient #2 with short-term CD4 decline below 200 From baseline to Week 144, HIV RNA was <50 copies/mL. No change in treatment. CD4 percentage was in the range of 22-27% throughout the trial, except for a single result of 17% when the absolute CD4 count was also low. CD4 count cells/uL Weeks on treatment (HIV RNA <50 copies/mL)
Royal Free cohort, London Follow-up of 166 patients on antiretroviral therapy with HIV RNA <50 copies/mL and CD4 counts above 500 cells/µL Only five of the 166 patients (3%) showed a decline in CD4 count <350 cells/µL during 47 weeks of follow up. All were isolated reductions: _________________________________________________________________________ Patient Baseline Low visit Follow up visit _________________________________________________________________________ 1 532 262 374 2 740 330 705 3 650 331 792 4 560 347 392 5 642 349 404 _________________________________________________________________________ Phillips et al. AIDS 2002, 16: 1073-1075
Conclusions For patients with CD4 counts above 350 cells/µL and HIV RNA <50 copies/mL on antiretroviral treatment, there was no clear benefit for CD4 testing in the MONET trial and two cohort studies In the MONET Trial and the Royal Free cohort, a small number of patients had short-term reductions in CD4 count, which then rose at the next visit with no change in treatment. Monitoring patients with HIV RNA alone seems feasible – this analysis needs to be repeated in larger cohorts of patients, preferably in developing countries