Effects of Antiretroviral Therapy and Depressive Symptoms on All-Cause Mortality Among HIV-Infected Women

Jonathan Todd(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Stephen R. Cole(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Brian W. Pence(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Catherine R. Lesko(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Peter Bacchetti(University of California, San Francisco), Mardge H. Cohen(Rush University), Daniel J. Feaster(University of Miami), Stephen J. Gange(Johns Hopkins University), Michael Griswold(University of Mississippi), Wendy J. Mack(University of Southern California), Anna Rubtsova(Emory University), Cuiwei Wang(Georgetown University), Jeremy Weedon(SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University), Kathryn Anastos(Yeshiva University), Adaora A. Adimora(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
American Journal of Epidemiology
November 11, 2016
Cited by 52Open Access
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Abstract

Depression affects up to 30% of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals. We estimated joint effects of antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation and depressive symptoms on time to death using a joint marginal structural model and data from a cohort of HIV-infected women from the Women's Interagency HIV Study (conducted in the United States) from 1998-2011. Among 848 women contributing 6,721 years of follow-up, 194 participants died during follow-up, resulting in a crude mortality rate of 2.9 per 100 women-years. Cumulative mortality curves indicated greatest mortality for women who reported depressive symptoms and had not initiated ART. The hazard ratio for depressive symptoms was 3.38 (95% confidence interval (CI): 2.15, 5.33) and for ART was 0.47 (95% CI: 0.31, 0.70). Using a reference category of women without depressive symptoms who had initiated ART, the hazard ratio for women with depressive symptoms who had initiated ART was 3.60 (95% CI: 2.02, 6.43). For women without depressive symptoms who had not started ART, the hazard ratio was 2.36 (95% CI: 1.16, 4.81). Among women reporting depressive symptoms who had not started ART, the hazard ratio was 7.47 (95% CI: 3.91, 14.3). We found a protective effect of ART initiation on mortality, as well as a harmful effect of depressive symptoms, in a cohort of HIV-infected women.


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