BMJ 1995;311:156-158 (15 July)

Papers

HIV positive patients first presenting with an AIDS defining illness: characteristics and survival

Mark C Poznansky, lecturer,a Richard Coker, consultant,a Celia Skinner, senior registrar,a Alistair Hill, data manager,a Suzanne Bailey, data manager,a Luke Whitaker, research fellow,b Adrian Renton, senior lecturer,b Jonathan Weber, professor a

a Department of Genitourinary Medicine and Communicable Diseases, St Mary's Hospital Medical School, London W2 1NN, b Academic Department of Public Health, St Mary's Hospital Medical School, London W2 1NY

Correspondence to: Dr Poznansky.

Abstract

Objectives: To study the presentation and survival of patients who present with their first diagnosis of being HIV positive at the same time as their AIDS defining illness.
Design: Retrospective study of patients presenting with AIDS between 1991 and 1993.
Setting: Department of genitourinary medicine, St Mary's Hospital, London.
Main outcome measures: AIDS defining illness at presentation and survival after diagnosis of AIDS.
Results: Between January 1991 and December 1993, 97 out of 436 patients (22%) presented with their first AIDS defining illness coincident with their first positive result of an HIV test (group B). The remaining 339 patients (78%) had tested positive for HIV-1 infection within the previous eight years and had consequently been followed up in clinics before developing their first AIDS defining illness (group A). The two groups of patients did not differ in age and sex distribution, risk factors for HIV-1 infection, nationality, country of origin, or haematological variables determined at the time of the AIDS defining illness. However, the defining illnesses differed between the two groups. Illnesses associated with severe immunodeficiency (the wasting syndrome, cryptosporidiosis, and cytomegalovirus infection) were seen almost exclusively in group A whereas extrapulmonary tuberculosis and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia were more common in group B. The survival of patients in group B after the onset of AIDS was significantly longer than that of patients in group A as determined by Kaplan-Meier log rank analysis (P=0.0026).
Conclusions: Subjects who are HIV positive and present late are a challenge to the control of the spread of HIV infection because they progress from asymptomatic HIV infection to AIDS without receiving health care. The finding that presentation with an AIDS defining illness coincident with a positive result in an HIV test did not have a detrimental effect on survival gives insights into the effects of medical intervention on disease progression after a diagnosis of AIDS.

Key messages

  • Key messages

  • Patients who present in this way are a challenge to the control of the spread of HIV infection

  • Presentation with AIDS coincident with the first positive result of an HIV test does not seem to have a detrimental effect on survival after development of an AIDS defining illness

  • The study of patients who progress from primary HIV infection to AIDS without receiving medical intervention gives insights into the effects of medical intervention on presentation and survival after developing an AIDS defining illness


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