Results
 |
Among
512 inmates followed for 9 years: |
| |
 |
388
(76%) were on intermittent ART; |
 |
79
(15%) were on continuous ART; |
 |
45
(9%) never on ART. |
|
 |
Patients
who took ART continuously were older on average
than those who interrupted or stopped treatment
(38 vs 35 years), and were followed longer in
jail before release. |
 |
In
a linear mixed model analysis, inmates on intermittent
ART were 1.43 times more likely to have higher
HIV viral load than inmates on continuous ART.
|
 |
Inmates
never on ART were 2.89 times more likely to have
higher viral load compared with those on continuous
treatment. |
 |
With
regard to CD4 cell count, inmates on intermittent
ART lost 1.60 cells/mm3 more per month, and never-treated
individuals lost 1.97 cells/mm3 more per month,
compared with people on continuous treatment. |
 |
Inmates
in the continuous ART group, in contrast, gained
0.67 cells/mm3 per month. |
Based
on these findings, the study authors concluded, "Continuous
ART therapy in jail inmates benefits CD4 cell counts
and control of viral load especially compared to those
who never took ART."
"Although
jail inmates on intermittent ART were more likely
to lose CD4 cells and experience higher viral load
over time than those on continuous ART, CD4 cell loss
was slower in these inmates as compared to inmates
never on ART," they continued. "Further
studies are needed to evaluate whether or not intermittent
ART provides some benefit in outcome if continuous
ART is not possible or likely."
In
their discussion of the findings, the researchers
recommended that in order to maintain the benefits
of ART outside jails, "effective community transition
and prison release programs that focus on antiretroviral
therapy management along with linkages to community
providers, stabilization of housing, and community
based support services are needed."
Division
of Clinical Epidemiology, Division of Infectious Diseases,
McGill University Health Center, Montreal, Canada;
Forensic AIDS Project, Department of Public Health,
San Francisco, CA: Department of Epidemiology &
Biostatistics, McGill University, Montreal, Canada;
Division of Epidemiology, University of California
at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA: University of California
at San Francisco, Positive Health Program, San Francisco
General Hospital, San Francisco, CA.
10/30/09
Reference
NP
Pai, M Estes, EE Moodie, and others. The Impact of
Antiretroviral Therapy in a Cohort of HIV Infected
Patients Going in and out of the San Francisco County
Jail. PLoS One 4(9):e7115. September 22, 2009.
(Free
full text).