More
Evidence for Starting ART at 500 CD4 Cells
SUMMARY
Starting antiretroviral treatment when CD4 count falls
below 500 cells/mm3 reduces the risk of AIDS-defining
illness -- but not death -- compared with a 350 cells/mm3
threshold. |
By
Liz Highleyman
Since
the early years of effective antiretroviral
therapy (ART), experts have debated the optimal time to
start treatment. Starting early can preserve immune function
and a growing body of evidence suggests it may prevent long-term
problems related to chronic inflammation. On the other hand,
early ART initiation involves greater expense and side effects
related to long-term therapy.
While
it has long been clear that starting ART before a person's
CD4 T-cell count falls below 200 cells/mm3 reduces the likelihood
of progression to AIDS or death, there has been less evidence
regarding benefits and risks of starting at higher thresholds.
In
December
2009, the U.S. antiretroviral treatment guidelines panel
raised the recommended ART initiation threshold from 350 to
500 cells/mm3, with half the panel favoring even earlier therapy.
European and World Health Organization thresholds stand at
350 cells/mm3.
As described in the April
19, 2011, Annals of Internal Medicine, investigators
with the HIV-CAUSAL Collaboration compared combination ART
initiation strategies, aiming to identify the optimal CD4
cell count at which treatment should be initiated, with a
focus on developed or high-income countries.
This prospective observational study looked at nearly 21,000
treatment-naive patients at HIV clinics in Europe and the
Veterans Administration health system in the U.S. enrolled
between 1996 and 2009.
All participants entered the study with CD4 counts of at least
500 cells/mm3 (median 660 cells/mm3) and no prior AIDS-defining
illnesses. A total of 390 people developed an AIDS-defining
illness or died before their CD4 count fell below 500 cells/mm3,
nearly 3000 started ART while their count was still above
500 cells/mm3, and approximately 9000 maintained this level
without treatment.
The remaining 8392 participants had CD4 counts that fell into
the 200-500 cells/mm3 range during follow-up; within this
group, researchers compared outcomes among people who started
ART at thresholds ranging from 200 to 500 cells/mm3.
Results
 |
People
who started combination ART at 350 cells/mm3 had a similar
risk of death due to all causes as those who started at
500 cells/mm3 (hazard ratio 1.01, or essentially no difference). |
 |
Those
who started at 200 cells/mm3 had a somewhat increased
risk of death compared with those who started at 500 cells/mm3
(hazard ratio 1.20, or 20% increased risk). |
 |
Looking
at progression to AIDS-defining illness or death combined,
people who started at 350 cells were at significantly
greater risk than those who started at 500 cells/mm3 (hazard
ratio 1.38, or 38% increase). |
 |
The
difference in the combined endpoint was even greater for
those who started at 200 compared with 500 cells/mm3 (hazard
ratio 1.90, or nearly double the risk). |
 |
However,
5-year survival rates (98%) and AIDS-free survival rates
(92%) were the same for people who started ART at 350
and 500 cells/mm3. |
 |
Based
on these findings, approximately 48 patients would have
to start ART at a threshold of 500 rather than 350 cells/mm3
to prevent 1 AIDS-defining illness or death over 5 years. |
"Initiation
of combination ART at a threshold CD4 count of [500 cells/mm3]
increases AIDS-free survival," the study authors concluded.
"However, mortality did not vary substantially with the
use of CD4 thresholds between [300 and 500 cells/mm3]."
A limitation of this study is that it did not look at non-AIDS
conditions such as cardiovascular, liver, and kidney disease,
which account for a growing proportion of morbidity and mortality
among people with HIV now that effective therapy has dramatically
reduced rates of opportunistic illness and AIDS-related death.
In an accompanying editorial, Jason Baker and Keith Henry
argued that, "the continuing HIV epidemic and tightening
of resources requires that we clarify the absolute benefits,
risks, and costs of expanding the indications for combination
ART."
A large study called START is now underway to address this
question, but it is expected to take several years to provide
answers.
Investigator affiliations: Harvard School of Public Health,
Boston, Massachusetts; University of Bristol, Bristol, United
Kingdom; University College London Medical School and Medical
Research Council, London, United Kingdom; Veterans Affairs
Connecticut Healthcare System and Yale University School of
Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; University of Amsterdam,
Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Universitätsspital Basel,
Basel, Switzerland; University Hospital Zurich and University
of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Hospital Universitari Germans
Trias i Pujol, Badalona, Spain; Instituto de Salud Carlos
III and Hospital Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain; Hôpital
de Bicêtre, Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France; Barcelona
Center for International Health Research and Hospital Clinic,
Barcelona, Spain; and INSERM U943, Université Pierre
et Marie Curie, and Hôpital Pitié-Salpétrière,
Paris, France.
5/6/11
References
HIV-CAUSAL Collaboration. When to Initiate Combined Antiretroviral
Therapy to Reduce Mortality and AIDS-Defining Illness in HIV-Infected
Persons in Developed Countries: An Observational Study. Annals
of Internal Medicine 154(8):509-515 (abstract).
April 19, 2011.
J Baker and K Henry. If we can't get what we want, can we
get what we need? Optimizing use of antiretroviral therapy
in the current era. Annals of Internal Medicine 154(8):
563-565. April 19, 2011.