A 25-year-old diagnosed with HIV and treated with HIV therapy can
expect to live to his 60s, Danes show
Thomas Kristensen, Friday, January 19, 2007
In settings where there is easy and free access to HIV medication and
care, a young adult diagnosed with HIV has an estimated median
survival rate of more than 35 years. However, this median survival
rate is significantly lower than that of an HIV-negative person,
according to a Danish study published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
The study also found that HIV-positive individuals who were coinfected
with hepatitis C virus, and patients who were older at the time of HIV
diagnosis could expect to have poorer survival than younger, hepatitis
C-uninfected HIV-positive patients.
The objective of the study was to estimate survival time and
age-specific mortality rates of HIV positive people and compare the
estimates with that of the general population. The study included data
from all HIV-positive individuals treated in Danish HIV clinics from
January 1995 until May 2005.
A total of 3,990 HIV-positive individuals and 379,872 people from the
general population of Denmark were included in the investigators'
analysis. The study sample was taken from the Danish HIV Cohort Study
and the Danish Civil Registration System. The first includes all
HIV-positive people treated in Danish HIV clinics from 1995 and the
latter includes all people registered as living in Denmark.
Survival among HIV positive people increased significantly during the
study period. In the five-year period from 2000 to 2005, the median
survival rate for HIV positive people rose to 33 years. Survival was
even better (39 years) when the investigators excluded the 16% of
HIV-positive patients who were coinfected with hepatitis C virus.
According to the investigators' estimates, an individual diagnosed
with HIV aged 25 could expect to survive until they were 64, compared
to 76 years of age for the HIV-negative control group.
However, the mortality rate was significantly higher amongst
HIV-positive patients than their HIV-negative peers. Mortality amongst
individuals with HIV was 43 per 1000 person years compared to 4.7 per
1000 years in the general population.
Mortality fell significantly amongst patients with HIV following the
introduction of potent HIV therapy. A mortality rate of 124 per 1000
person years was observed in 1995-96, but this fell to 38 per 1000
person years between 1997 and 1999 and 25 per 1000 person years in the
five years after 2000.
Individuals who were coinfected with HIV and hepatitis C had
significantly higher mortality rates than patients who only had HIV
(59 per 1000 versus 38 per 1000 person years between 1997 and 1999),
and this difference became even more marked after 2000 (mortality rate
57 per 1000 person years versus 19 per 1000 person years).
The investigators also established that age was an important
determinant of survival. Mortality amongst HIV-positive, but hepatitis
C-uninfected individuals aged between 25 and 50 was 12 per 1000 person
years between 2000 - 2005, increasing gradually to 54 per 1000 person
years in individuals aged between 65 -70 years.
Changes in the cause of death were observed by the investigators. The
proportion of deaths related to HIV fell from 76% between 1995 - 1996
to 57% between 19997 and 1999 and to 43% between 2000 and 2005.
"We estimate a median remaining lifetime of more than 35 years for a
25-year-old, HIV-positive person without HCV infection who receives
care in the twenty-first century", write the investigators.
However, "despite the encouraging survival expectations, the study
shows large, age-dependent excess mortality in the HIV-infected cohort
compared with the general population."
Chronic HIV infection is often compared to diabetes, but when the
investigators compared the mortality among patients with type 1
diabetes with mortality amongst HIV-positive individuals, they found
higher mortality rates amongst people with HIV.
"Our study suggests that most young people with the HIV infection can
expect to survive for more than 35 years, but an ongoing effort is
still needed to further reduce mortality rates amongst infected
people," conclude the investigators.
Reference
Lohse N et al. Survival of persons with and without HIV infection in
Denmark, 1995-2005. Annals of Internal Medicine:146: 87-95, 2007.
Life - 26 Jan 2007 17:26 GMT
>A 25-year-old diagnosed with HIV and treated with HIV therapy can
> expect to live to his 60s, Danes show
> Thomas Kristensen, Friday, January 19, 2007
Pure Pharma horseshit... no different than the cocktail nonsense of 10 years
ago which nearly depleted the pool of infectors... unfortunately, this
scam goes to the heart of "epidemic maintenance" - that is, making
sure that the HIV epidemic continues to provide bodies for drugs...
> In settings where there is easy and free access to HIV medication and
> care, a young adult diagnosed with HIV has an estimated median
> survival rate of more than 35 years.
A lie.
Pure junk science.
GMCarter - 27 Jan 2007 04:20 GMT
>>A 25-year-old diagnosed with HIV and treated with HIV therapy can
>> expect to live to his 60s, Danes show
>> Thomas Kristensen, Friday, January 19, 2007
>
>Pure Pharma horseshit...
Oh frod, just go f.ck yourself.
JOHN - 30 Jan 2007 04:13 GMT
>>A 25-year-old diagnosed with HIV and treated with HIV therapy can
>> expect to live to his 60s, Danes show
>> Thomas Kristensen, Friday, January 19, 2007
>
> Pure Pharma horseshit
Yeah, they sure know how to make that http://www.whale.to/a/hoaxmed.html
GMCarter - 30 Jan 2007 12:16 GMT
>"Life" <Life@life.com> wrote in message
>Yeah, they sure know how to make that http://www.whale.to/a/hoaxmed.html
Now there's a marriage made in hell....frod+john
ewg
Brian Mailman - 30 Jan 2007 19:43 GMT
>>"Life" <Life@life.com> wrote in message
>
>>Yeah, they sure know how to make that http://www.whale.to/a/hoaxmed.html
>
> Now there's a marriage made in hell....frod+john
> ewg
Which one's the man?
B/
GMCarter - 31 Jan 2007 01:27 GMT
>>>"Life" <Life@life.com> wrote in message
>>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
>Which one's the man?
Neither. Nor woman for that matter.
Marriage of misanthropic misfits of mildew
brainfart - 30 Jan 2007 12:30 GMT
JOHN wrote...
>>>A 25-year-old diagnosed with HIV and treated with HIV therapy can
>>>expect to live to his 60s, Danes show
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> Yeah, they sure know how to make that http://www.whale.to/a/hoaxmed.html
I don't think the claim is that outrageous. Unfortunately, they present
the long-term survival rate as a good thing when actually it is a very
bad thing, because it means that the AIDS patient has so many more years
to infect others with his HIV virus. And while he doesn't care because
it doesn't affect him directly, the virus he infects his sex partners
with is already resistant to many antiviral drugs, because evolution
means that the viruses that survived in his system were the ones not
completely killed by the drug treatment, so those he infects will not
respond nearly as well to treatment and will not enjoy the same 60-year
lifespan.
GMCarter - 30 Jan 2007 16:28 GMT
>JOHN wrote...
>>
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
>I don't think the claim is that outrageous.
LOL.