8 research outputs found

    Which antiretrovirals should be prescribed as first-line treatments? Changes over the past 10 years in France

    No full text
    International audienceOBJECTIVE:To describe the changes in first-line antiretroviral (ART) regimens in France between 2005 and 2015 and patients' characteristics related to the use of protease inhibitors in 2015.METHODS:We extracted all patients starting ART between 2005 and 2015 from a large prospective cohort. Regimens were classified as three nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI), or two NRTIs with a boosted protease inhibitor (bPI), with a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI), or with an INSTI. Patients' characteristics at the time of initiation were collected. A multinomial logit model was fitted to analyze characteristics related to the choice of regimen in 2015.RESULTS:We analyzed data from 15,897 patients. The proportion of patients starting with (i) a bPI decreased from 60% before 2014 to 38.1% in 2015; (ii) an NNRTI decreased from 30% to 17.8% in 2015; (iii) an INSTI gradually increased to 39.4% in 2015. In 2015, patients with an initial viral load ˃5 log copies/mL were less likely to receive NNRTI (OR=0.08) or INSTI regimens (OR=0.69) than bPIs. Patients with initial CD4+ T cell count ˂200/mm3 were less likely to receive an NNRTI (OR=0.28) or an INSTI regimen (OR=0.52) than a bPI. Women were less likely to receive an NNRTI (OR=0.79) or an INSTI regimen (OR=0.71) than a bPI; although this depended on age.CONCLUSION:The use of bPI as first-line ART declined sharply in France from 2005 to 2015. bPI remained of preferential use in patients with high viral load, low CD4+ T cell count, and in women

    Long COVID-19 Symptoms: Clinical Characteristics and Recovery Rate among Non-Severe Outpatients over a Six-Month Follow-Up

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: To describe persistent symptoms in long COVID-19 non-severe outpatients and report the 6-month clinical recovery (CR) rate. METHODS: Observational study enrolling outpatients (≥ 18 years) with confirmed non-severe COVID-19 (positive nasopharyngeal RT-PCR or presence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies) who consulted for persistent symptoms after the first pandemic wave (March-May 2020). CR was assessed at the 6-month visit and defined as complete (no symptom), partial (persistent symptoms of lower intensity) or lack of recovery (no improvement). RESULTS: Sixty-three patients (79% women, mean age: 48 years) enrolled; main symptoms (mean 81 days after acute infection): asthenia/myalgia (77%), dyspnea (51%), headaches (35%), cough (33%). At 6 months (n = 56), 30% had complete, 57% partial, and 13% lack of recovery. The proportion of patients with > 2 persistent symptoms was 26% at 6 months (main symptoms: dyspnea [54%] and asthenia/myalgia [46%]). CONCLUSION: We observed a slow but high recovery rate at 6 months among these outpatients

    A highly virulent variant of HIV-1 circulating in the Netherlands.

    No full text
    We discovered a highly virulent variant of subtype-B HIV-1 in the Netherlands. One hundred nine individuals with this variant had a 0.54 to 0.74 log <sub>10</sub> increase (i.e., a ~3.5-fold to 5.5-fold increase) in viral load compared with, and exhibited CD4 cell decline twice as fast as, 6604 individuals with other subtype-B strains. Without treatment, advanced HIV-CD4 cell counts below 350 cells per cubic millimeter, with long-term clinical consequences-is expected to be reached, on average, 9 months after diagnosis for individuals in their thirties with this variant. Age, sex, suspected mode of transmission, and place of birth for the aforementioned 109 individuals were typical for HIV-positive people in the Netherlands, which suggests that the increased virulence is attributable to the viral strain. Genetic sequence analysis suggests that this variant arose in the 1990s from de novo mutation, not recombination, with increased transmissibility and an unfamiliar molecular mechanism of virulence
    corecore