101. Late presentation and loss to follow-up of immigrants newly diagnosed with HIV in the HAART era.
- Author
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Saracino A, Tartaglia A, Trillo G, Muschitiello C, Bellacosa C, Brindicci G, Monno L, and Angarano G
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, HIV Infections epidemiology, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Lost to Follow-Up, Male, Risk Factors, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Emigrants and Immigrants, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections ethnology
- Abstract
To compare clinical characteristics and therapeutic management of newly HIV-diagnosed immigrants to natives. Patients with a first HIV diagnosis from 1996 to 2010 were included. Of 716 new diagnoses, 85 (12 %) were immigrants. Migrants were younger, more frequently females and sexually infected, less likely to voluntarily request testing, and less HCV-coinfected. Late presenters (CD4 <350 or AIDS) were 76 % among migrants versus 56 % in natives (p = 0.006) with an increasing trend over time. HAART was initiated in 76.5 % of natives and 72.4 % of immigrants; the number/type of adverse events and treatment discontinuation were similar. Immigrants received more NNRTIs-based regimens. A similar proportion of patients reached virological suppression at month 1-3-6 after HAART initiation, but 43 % of immigrants versus 27 % of natives resulted lost to follow-up (p < 0.001). Diagnosis of HIV was often delayed among migrants, who also presented a higher rate of lost to follow-up.
- Published
- 2014
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