1. Antiretroviral therapy improves renal function among HIV-infected Ugandans.
- Author
-
Peters, Philip J., Moore, David M., Mermin, Jonathan, Brooks, John T., Downing, Robert, Were, Willy, Kigozi, Aminah, Buchacz, Kate, and Weidle, Paul J.
- Subjects
- *
HIGHLY active antiretroviral therapy , *KIDNEY diseases , *HIV infections , *KIDNEYS , *CREATINE - Abstract
Renal dysfunction is a severe complication of advanced HIV disease. We evaluated the impact of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) on renal function among HIV-infected Ugandans in the Home-Based AIDS Care clinical trial. The patients presented with symptomatic HIV disease or CD4 cell count 250 cells/mm3 and creatinine clearances above 25 ml/min determined by the Cockcroft-Gault equation. Of the 508 patients at baseline, 8% had a serum creatinine over 133 μmol/l and about 20% had reduced renal function evidenced by a creatinine clearance between 25 and 50 ml/min. After 2 years of HAART, the median serum creatinine was significantly decreased by 16% while the median creatinine clearance significantly increased 21%. The median creatinine clearance of patients with renal dysfunction at baseline, increased by 53% during 2 years of treatment. In multivariable analysis, a baseline creatinine above 133 μmol/l, a weight gain of more than 5 kg over the 2 years, female gender and a WHO stage 4 classification were all associated with greater improvements in creatinine clearance on HAART. Our study shows that renal dysfunction was common with advanced HIV disease in Uganda but this improved following 2 years of HAART.Kidney International (2008) 74, 925–929; doi:10.1038/ki.2008.305; published online 9 July 2008 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF