19 research outputs found

    Baseline characteristics of 454 study participants.

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    <p>* Ease of living index was defined according to the presence of water, electricity and/or flushing toilets inside the home. Low = 0/3. Medium = 1-2/3. Higher = 3/3</p><p>** Defined as waist/hip ratio of ≥0.85 for women and waist/hip ratio ≥0.90 for men</p><p>Baseline characteristics of 454 study participants.</p

    Glucose metabolism disorders (GMD) among 454 study participants.

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    <p>* Primary outcome: defined as either Diabetes Mellitus or Impaired Fasting Glucose or Impaired Glucose Tolerance</p><p>Glucose metabolism disorders (GMD) among 454 study participants.</p

    Multivariable models for association between HIV status and glucose metabolism disorders (GMD) to assess for confounding.

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    <p>All models are compared to HIV-negative controls. Models 1, 2, 3 & 4 were predetermined based on most likely confounders. Models 5 + 6 included other baseline characteristics significantly associated with glucose metabolism disorders in the minimally-adjusted model.</p><p>* Best fit mode</p><p>Multivariable models for association between HIV status and glucose metabolism disorders (GMD) to assess for confounding.</p

    Long-term persistence of RAM.

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    <p>Of the 16 patients who presented with RAM at baseline, we analyzed plasma specimens collected at later time points (“follow-up 1”, “follow-up 2”) for the presence of RAM. We detected three different scenarios, including persistent RAM, disappearing RAM, and newly emerging RAM (some samples appear in more than one scenario). Time to follow-up sample is indicated in months. In some cases, no PCR product from plasma samples could be generated. The investigation for long-term stability of RAM is insofar incomplete as plasma specimens collected at later time points were not available (“n.a.”) for all patients, referred to as “n.d.” (not determined).</p

    NVP resistance and PMTCT.

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    <p>Patients with NVP resistance mutations were analyzed regarding PMTCT (with NVP monotherapy) as a possible cause for the emergence of the mutation. PMTCT as a cause for the mutation's appearance is discussed as “possible” if the mother received PMTCT; it is discussed as “unclear” if the PMTCT status and the dates of birth of the children are unknown; for plausibility reasons PMTCT was excluded (“no”) as a trigger of the NVP mutation if the patient is either male or if a female patient presented with unknown PMTCT history combined with the HIV infection being diagnosed only since the date of birth of the youngest child.</p

    HIVDR affects efficacy of local first- and second-line ART regimens.

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    <p>Effects of HIVDR (high- and low-level resistances) on drugs included in the local antiretroviral regimens. A: Effects on local first-line ART regimen. HIVDR that affects at least one of the drugs included in first-line therapy (AZT/D4T plus 3TC plus NVP/EFV) scored positive. B: Effects on local second-line ART regimen. HIVDR that affects at least one of the drugs included in second-line therapy (ddI/ABC plus LPV/SQV plus RTV) scored positive. C: Proportion of patients with HIVDR that affects first-line ART regimen who also carry HIVDR that affects second-line ART regimen.</p

    Demographic patient characteristics of the study population.

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    <p>The study population consisted of 120 ART-naive HIV-1 infected adults. PBMC- or plasma samples from 88 patients yielded amplicons for the bulk sequencing reaction. Data are expressed as means ± S.D. and range in parentheses. Patients with CD4 counts <200/ml at sample date initiated ART if CD4 counts remained below 350/ml four weeks later.</p

    Phylogenetic analysis of RT and PR sequences from the Tanzanian cohort.

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    <p>A neighbour-joining phylogenetic tree <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0023091#pone.0023091-Saitou1" target="_blank">[30]</a> was constructed from the 88 patient derived HIV-1 sequences from the Tanzania cohort and the two partner-derived sequences. Reference sequences were obtained from the Los Alamos HIV sequence database. The analyzed 1302 bp region includes the complete Protease and Reverse Transcriptase coding region. The tree was constructed using Mega software version 4, and the evolutionary distances were calculated using the Kimura 2-parameter method. The bootstrap consensus tree was inferred from 50000 replicates and values greater than 70% are indicated on the branch lengths. The scale at the bottom left indicates the calculated genetic distances between the branches of the phylogenetic tree. Circles represent the 88 samples from our cohort. Black-dotted circles are without RAM, open-circled sequences are with RAM, open triangles are sequences with RAM from HIV-infected partners of two study subjects, which were not included in the determination of HIVDR as these patients received ART. Sequences without symbols are subtype reference sequences derived from Los Alamos database. The subtype is indicated at the end of each sequence name. Relative subtype frequency: A1: 34%, A1D: 7%, C: 26%, CRF10_CD: 4%, D: 28%, B: 1%. Sequences isolated from two couples (couple I, couple II) with NVP resistances.</p

    The frequency of HIVDR is age-dependent.

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    <p>HIVDR was determined by bulk sequencing from ART-naïve patients. A.: Frequency of WHO-defined HIVDR in patients aged under 25 years (n = 20, left bar), patients aged over 25 years (n = 68, middle bar), and in the total study population (n = 88, right white bar). B: Frequency of WHO-defined HIVDR peaks in different age groups. Numbers in brackets indicate the number of individuals tested in each age group. Data as means ± S.E.M.. For statistical analysis, Fisher's exact test was performed. Differences with a P<0.05 were regarded as statistically significant. C: Number of WHO-defined RAM per individual (“RAM burden”). D: Number of affected antiretroviral drug classes (NRTI, NNRTI, PI) per individual in relation to the number of WHO-defined RAM per individual.</p
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