Studies
Suggest HIV Subtype More Deadly Than Others
HIV Survival Rate
Significantly Shorter in Thailand Compared to Other
Regions
Two studies led by researchers at the
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
found that people infected with HIV in Thailand die from
the disease significantly sooner than those with HIV
living in other parts of the world. According to the
researchers, the shorter survival time measured in the
studies suggests that HIV subtype E, which is the most
common HIV subtype in Thailand, may be more virulent
than other subtypes of the virus. Both studies are
published in a special issue of the journal AIDS.
The first study followed 228 men over
a 14-year period starting in 1991. All of the men were
serving in the Thai military and were HIV-negative when
they enrolled in the study. The researchers tested for
HIV every six months to determine approximately when
they acquired HIV. The men were also diagnosed at a time
before combination antiretroviral drug therapy was
available.
The researchers compared the group of
Thai men to a group of similar HIV-positive men living
in North America and Europe who were included in another
study. The median time from HIV infection to death for
the Thai men was 7.8 years compared to 11 years for
HIV-positive men living in North America and Europe. The
survival rate for the Thai men was also lower than
studies of similar populations living in low- and
middle-income countries in sub-Saharan Africa where
subtypes A, C, D and G circulate. However, the shorter
survival after HIV infection among persons in Africa
infected with subtype D was similar to the survival
among the Thai men.
“We were surprised to learn that the
young military recruits from Thailand appeared to
develop AIDS more quickly and have shorter survival
after their HIV infection than persons in Africa who
were carefully followed,” said lead author Ram Rangsin,
assistant professor of Community and Military Medicine
at Phramongkutklao College of Medicine in Bangkok.
Rangsin conducted the research while studying at the
Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Fortunately, the men
who have survived after their infection are now
receiving treatment with effective antiviral drugs and
doing very well.”
For the second study, researchers
followed a small group of male blood donors and their
wives from 1992 to 2007. All of the men and women were
determined to have acquired HIV fewer than two years
prior to enrolling in the study. The median survival
rate from infection to death was 7.8 years for the men
and 9.6 years for the women. Again, the survival rate
was lower than the 11 years reported for HIV-positive
men in developed countries.
“The fact that both young military
conscripts and blood donors and their wives in Thailand
had similarly shortened survival compared to persons in
the U.S. and Africa–except those infected with subtype D
viruses—suggests that viral subtypes D and E may be more
virulent than many other viral subtypes,” said Kenrad E.
Nelson, MD, a senior author of both studies and
professor in the departments of Epidemiology and
International Health at the Bloomberg School. “If we
could understand better the virulence characteristics of
these viruses, we might learn something more about why
those with HIV infection progress to AIDS, usually many
years after they are infected.”
“The natural history of HIV-1 subtype
E infection in young men in Thailand with up to 14 years
of follow-up” was written by Ram Rangsin, Phunlerd
Piyaraj, Thira Sirisanthana, Narongrid Sirisopana, Onsri
Short and Kenrad E. Nelson.
The research was supported by the
Office of AIDS Research at the National Institutes of
Health and Thailand Research Fund. Funding was also
provided by the Fogarty International Center of the
National Institutes of Health.
“Survival of blood donors and their
spouses with HIV-1 subtype E infection in northern
Thailand 1992-2007” was written by Kenrad E. Nelson,
Caroline Costello, Vinai Suriyanon, Supaluk Sennun and
Ann Duerr.
The research was supported by the
Center for Disease Control and Prevention through the
CONRAD program at East Virginia Medical School.
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