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JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes:
1 November 2001 - Volume 28 - Issue 3 - pp 221-225
Clinical Science

HIV-Associated Hematologic Disorders Are Correlated With Plasma Viral Load and Improve Under Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy

Servais, Jean*; Nkoghe, Dieudonné†; Schmit, Jean-Claude*‡; Arendt, Vic*‡; Robert, Isabelle*; Staub, Thérèse‡; Moutschen, Michel†; Schneider, François*§; Hemmer, Robert*‡

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Abstract

The relationship between HIV-1 replication and hematologic parameters was examined in two separate studies. The first study was a cross-sectional evaluation of 207 untreated patients. In this study, the proportion of patients with hematologic disorders increased with disease progression. There was a significant inverse correlation between HIV-1 plasma viral load and all hematologic values (r = -0.266 to -0.331). The second study was a longitudinal evaluation of patients on combination antiretroviral therapy (HAART) with hematologic alterations before treatment (N = 27 with platelets <150,000/μl, 24 with hemoglobin <12 g/dl, 36 with neutrophils <2000/μl and 29 with leukocytes <3000/μl). Samples were analyzed every 3 months for 2 years. At 2 years, >50% of patients experienced a sustained virologic response, with viral loads <500 RNA copies/ml. Hematologic reconstitution occurred progressively for all blood cell lineages and became statistically significant after the sixth month of therapy (p < .001). Mean values increased from 110 to 180 × 10 3 /μl for platelets, from 10.7 to 12.3 g/dl for hemoglobin (stabilizing finally at 11.4 g/dl), from 1,260 to 2,240/μl for neutrophils, and from 2,260 to 3,600/μl for leukocytes. In conclusion, hematologic disorders are corrected by combination antiretroviral therapy. This suggests a causative role of HIV-1 in hematologic disorders.

© 2001 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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