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      Patient Preference and Adherence (submit here)

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      Assessment of the impact of adherence and other predictors during HAART on various CD4 cell responses in resource-limited settings

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          Abstract

          Objective

          The aim of this study was to quantify, by modeling, the impact of significant predictors on CD4 cell response during antiretroviral therapy in a resource-limited setting.

          Methods

          Modeling was used to determine which antiretroviral therapy response predictors (baseline CD4 cell count, clinical state, age, and adherence) significantly influence immunological response in terms of CD4 cell gain compared to a reference value at different periods of monitoring.

          Results

          At 6 months, CD4 cell response was significantly influenced by baseline CD4 count alone. The probability of no increase in CD4 cells was 2.6 higher in patients with a baseline CD4 cell count of ≥200/mm 3. At 12 months, CD4 cell response was significantly influenced by both baseline CD4 cell count and adherence. The probability of no increase in CD4 cells was three times higher in patients with a baseline CD4 cell count of ≥200/mm 3 and 0.15 times lower with adherent patients. At 18 months, CD4 cell response was also significantly influenced by both baseline CD4 cell count and adherence. The probability of no increase in CD4 cells was 5.1 times higher in patients with a baseline CD4 cell count of ≥200/mm 3 and 0.28 times lower with adherent patients. At 24 months, optimal CD4 cell response was significantly influenced by adherence alone. Adherence increased the probability (by 5.8) of an optimal increase in CD4 cells. Age and baseline clinical state had no significant influence on immunological response.

          Conclusion

          The relationship between adherence and CD4 cell response was the most significant compared to that of baseline CD4 cell count. Counseling before initiation of treatment and educational therapy during follow-up must always help to strengthen adherence and optimize the efficiency of antiretroviral therapy in a resource-limited setting.

          Author and article information

          Journal
          Patient Prefer Adherence
          Patient Prefer Adherence
          Patient preference and adherence
          Dove Medical Press
          1177-889X
          2012
          23 March 2012
          : 6
          : 227-237
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Laboratoire de Pharmacie Clinique, Pharmacologie et Therapeutique – UFR Sciences Pharmaceutiques et Biologiques, CHU de Cocody
          [2 ]Laboratoire de Pharmacologie Clinique, CHU de Cocody
          [3 ]Service de Pharmacie, CHU de Cocody, Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire
          [4 ]Service Pharmaceutique Hopital Louis Pradel, Lyon, France
          Author notes
          Correspondence: Danho Pascal Abrogoua, 22 BP 1397 Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, Tel +225 07 949 478, Email abrogouadp@ 123456yahoo.fr
          Article
          ppa-6-227
          10.2147/PPA.S26507
          3333809
          22536059
          d7d627be-68a6-4415-b220-86e8d2727eca
          © 2012 Abrogoua et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

          This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.

          History
          Categories
          Original Research

          Medicine
          adherence,abidjan,cd4 cells response,modeling,antiretroviral therapy,predictors
          Medicine
          adherence, abidjan, cd4 cells response, modeling, antiretroviral therapy, predictors

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