4.7 Article

Clinical Outcomes of Elite Controllers, Viremic Controllers, and Long-Term Nonprogressors in the US Department of Defense HIV Natural History Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 200, Issue 11, Pages 1714-1723

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/646609

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Durable control of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication and lack of disease progression in the absence of antiretroviral therapy were studied in a military cohort of 4586 subjects. We examined groups of elite controllers (ie, subjects with plasma HIV RNA levels of <50 copies/mL; prevalence, 0.55% [95% confidence interval{CI}, 0.35%-0.80%]), viremic controllers ( ie, subjects with plasma HIV RNA levels of 50-2000 copies/mL; prevalence, 3.34% [ 95% CI, 2.83%-3.91%]), and subjects with a lack of disease progression ( ie, long-term nonprogressors [LTNPs]) through 7 years of follow-up (LTNP7s; prevalence, 3.32% [ 95% CI, 2.70%-4.01%]) or 10 years of follow-up (LTNP10s; prevalence, 2.04% [ 95% CI, 1.52%-2.68%]). For elite and viremic controllers, spontaneous virologic control was established early and was typically observed when the initial viral load measurement was obtained within 1 year of estimated seroconversion. Elite controllers had favorable time to development of AIDS (P = .048), a CD4 cell count of 350 cells/mu L (P = .009), and more-stable CD4 cell trends, compared with viremic controllers. LTNPs defined by 10-year versus 7-year criteria had a longer survival time (P = .001), even after adjustment for differing periods of invulnerability (P = .042). Definitions of controllers and LTNPs describe distinct populations whose differing clinical outcomes improve with the stringency of criteria, underscoring the need for comparability between study populations.

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