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Views: () Date: (2003-4-26) Pages: () |
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To describe the causes of hospitalization and mortality among the MANIF 2000 cohort study, composed of HIV-infected patients contaminated through intravenous drug use. METHOD: Data collection with a standardized questionnaires with clinical, biological, therapeutic and psycho-sociologic data on inclusion and every six months. Dates and causes of hospitalization and death were collected retrospectively by nurses from the hospital clinical records. Comparison were made using the chi(2) or Mann-Whitney tests with 5% significance threshold. RESULTS: The MANIF 2000 cohort study included, between October 1995 and June 1998, 467 patients with a median age of 33 years, 30% of whom were women. On inclusion, 42.2% were still injecting drugs (half of them were on substitution therapy), 10.5% had stopped injections of drugs, 32% exhibited more than 500CD4/mm(3) and 55.7% had not taken antiretroviral treatment. As of December 31(st) 1999, 21 patients had died, i.e. a mortality rate of 19% persons/years of follow-up (10-fold greater than that expected in the general population). Less than 5 deaths were due to HIV (n=4). Suicides and liver disease each represented the same number of deaths. Out of the 335 patients not having missed more than one follow-up throughout the 24 month period, 120 had been hospitalized at least once (n=223 hospitalizations), i.e., a hospitalization rate of 2.8 per 100 persons/month of follow-up. A quarter of hospitalizations were due to benign infections or stage B or C pathologies according to the 1993 classification of HIV infections and one hospitalization out of 5 was due to psychiatric problems (in majority depressive syndromes). Other predominant causes were worsening of general state of health, trauma, problems related to alcohol consumption, drugs abuse or hepatic decompensation. CONCLUSION: HIV-infected patients contaminated by intravenous drug use represent a particular population that cumulates many risk factors and which requires careful monitoring of co-morbidities such as hepatic and psychiatric diseases in order to avoid premature death.