|
Depression
and Clinical Progression of HIV in Drug Users Treated with HAART
The
aim of this study among HIV positive drug users was to disentangle
the impact of adherence from that of
injecting drug status and depressive
syndrome on HIV
clinical progression in a cohort of HAART-treated
HIV patients infected through drug use.
MANIF
2000 is a French cohort of HIV-infected drug users with scheduled
medical visits every 6 months. Only patients enrolled in the MANIF
2000 cohort who had a CD4 cell count >200 cells/microliter at
HAART initiation were selected. The follow-up period included all
post-HAART initiation visits.
HIV
clinical progression was defined as either AIDS-related death or
reaching a CD4 level <200 cells/microliter.
Adherence
was assessed using a self-administered questionnaire and a structured
face-to-face interview.
Depressive
symptoms were evaluated by a Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression
Scale (CES-D) score at each visit.
Cox
proportional hazards model was used to calculate crude and adjusted
relative hazards and 95% confidence intervals and thus identify
independent predictors of clinical progression.
Results
·
Of
the 305 HAART-treated patients in the cohort, 243 had CD4 cell count
>200 cells/microliter at HAART initiation.
·
At
the first visit after HAART initiation, median CD4 cell count was
466 cells/microlitre and 45% had undetectable viral load.
·
Injecting
drug users accounted for 17% of the study group.
·
Over
the follow-up period, 32 patients experienced HIV clinical progression.
·
Probable
depression was encountered in 46% of patients and non-adherence
in 31% of the sample.
·
After
adjustment on baseline CD4 cell count, predictors of clinical progression
were: having a higher level of cumulative non-adherence over the
follow-up period and having a high score of depressive symptoms
following HAART initiation.
Conclusions
Based
on these results, the authors concluded the following:
·
Although depressive syndrome is known to influence
non-adherence behaviors that are amongst the major reasons for clinical
progression, it is also a predictor of clinical progression in HIV-infected
intravenous drug users on HAART, independently of non-adherence
behaviors.
·
HIV
care providers should be more sensitive to depressive symptoms in
order to detect them early and supply HIV patients with specific
care.
·
Further
research is needed to determine whether treating depressive symptoms
may improve adherence and thus delay disease progression and mortality.
05/23/05
Reference
A
B Bouhnik and others (the MANIF 2000 Study
Group). Depression
and clinical progression in HIV-infected drug users treated with
highly active antiretroviral therapy.
Antiviral Therapy 10: 53-61. 2005.
Link to Index of All HIV and AIDS
Articles by Topic
|