Survival of adults with AIDS in the United Kingdom.

P A Rogers, S E Whitmore-Overton, B G Evans, G M Allardice, A Noone
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Abstract

Accurate estimates of expected survival times and survival rates of AIDS patients are important both for estimating the prognosis of individuals and for monitoring the progress of the HIV/AIDS epidemic as new treatments are introduced. They are also needed for projecting future numbers of AIDS cases. Data on reported AIDS cases held at the PHLS AIDS Centre at the Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre and the Scottish Centre for Infection and Environmental Health confirmed the time, age, and reporting delay effects identified in earlier analyses of the United Kingdom AIDS database. The duration of survival after AIDS is diagnosed has improved since the epidemic began--median survival was 10.6 months in cases diagnosed before 1987 and has been at least 18.4 months in cases diagnosed each year since then. People who are diagnosed younger live longer--median survival fell from 21.6 months at age 15 to 29 to 12.6 months at age 45 or over. Delay in reporting AIDS cases adversely affects survival estimates for cases reported in recent years. Survival was longer in cases reported over a year after diagnosis of AIDS--23.7 months compared with 16.9 months in those reported less than a year after diagnosis. The experience of the hospital, measured by its cumulative AIDS caseload, was an important factor in the survival of men who have sex with men presenting with Kaposi's sarcoma alone or 'other' diagnoses--survival was shorter for cases reported from smaller centres. Men who have sex with men with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia alone or other opportunistic infections alone who were known to be HIV positive before being diagnosed with AIDS had a shorter survival after being diagnosed than those who were unaware of their HIV infection. This supports the hypothesis that treatment for HIV infection and prophylaxis may extend the period before AIDS develops but reduce the period between developing AIDS and dying.

英国成人艾滋病患者的存活率。
准确估计艾滋病患者的预期生存时间和存活率,对于估计个人的预后和随着新治疗方法的采用而监测艾滋病毒/艾滋病流行病的进展都很重要。它们还需要用于预测未来艾滋病病例的数量。传染病监测中心的PHLS艾滋病中心和苏格兰感染和环境卫生中心保存的关于报告的艾滋病病例的数据证实了联合王国艾滋病数据库早期分析中确定的时间、年龄和报告延迟效应。自艾滋病开始流行以来,诊断出艾滋病后的生存时间有所改善——1987年以前诊断出的病例中位生存期为10.6个月,自1987年以来每年诊断出的病例中位生存期至少为18.4个月。被诊断为年轻的人寿命更长——中位生存期从15岁至29岁时的21.6个月降至45岁或以上时的12.6个月。延迟报告艾滋病病例对近年来报告病例的生存估计产生不利影响。确诊后一年多的患者的生存时间更长——23.7个月,而确诊后不到一年的患者的生存时间为16.9个月。医院的经验,根据其累积的艾滋病病例量来衡量,是与男性发生性关系的男性仅患有卡波西肉瘤或“其他”诊断的生存率的一个重要因素——在较小的中心报告的病例的生存率较短。与患有卡氏肺囊虫肺炎或其他机会性感染的男性发生性行为的男性,在被诊断为艾滋病之前已知为艾滋病毒阳性,在被诊断后的生存时间比那些不知道自己感染艾滋病毒的男性短。这支持了一种假设,即对艾滋病毒感染的治疗和预防可能会延长艾滋病发展之前的时间,但会缩短从发展到死亡之间的时间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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