Author:
ROBAIN M.,BOUFASSA F.,HUBERT J. B.,DUSSAIX E.,SADEG K.,MEYER L.
Abstract
The influence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection as a co-factor in HIV-1 disease progression
has mainly been studied in haemophiliacs and remains controversial. Based on the files of 1683
HIV-1-infected patients in the Seropositive Cohort (SEROCO) and Haemophiliacs Cohort
(HEMOCO) cohorts, we studied the role of CMV infection in progression to CD4+ cell counts
of less than 200 μl, AIDS onset and death, in various HIV exposure groups. Adjusted relative
risk (aRR) of progression to AIDS and to death was respectively 1·30 (P = 0·05) and 1·58
(P = 0·007). In the sexual exposure group the influence of CMV infection on the risk of
progression to AIDS was of borderline significance (aRR = 1·50; P = 0·07) and was more
marked on the risk of death (aRR = 2·00; P = 0·03). No such influence of CMV infection was
observed in the transfusion and intravenous drug use exposure groups. When we studied the
influence of CMV infection according to the stage of HIV disease, the main effect was on
progression from AIDS to death, probably because CMV disease is a late event. Sexual CMV
transmission and frequent re-exposure to CMV may explain why CMV infection emerged as an
important co-factor for HIV progression only in the sexual exposure group.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
6 articles.
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