%0 Journal Article
%@ 1525-4135
%A Giacomelli, A
%A Cozzi-Lepri, A
%A Cingolani, A
%A Tavelli, A
%A Mazzotta, V
%A Tesoro, D
%A Bassetti, M
%A Castagna, A
%A Di Biagio, A
%A Lichter, M
%A Monforte, AD
%A Rusconi, S
%A ICONA Foundation Study Group, .
%D 2021
%F discovery:10130928
%J JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
%N 2
%P 132-137
%T Does Syphilis Increase the Risk of HIV-RNA Elevation >200 Copies/mL in HIV-Positive Patients Under Effective Antiretroviral Treatment? Data From the ICONA Cohort
%U https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10130928/
%V 88
%X BACKGROUND: To assess the impact of syphilis infection on the risk of HIV-RNA elevation in people living with HIV (PLWH) with current HIV-RNA ≤50 copies/mL. SETTING: The Italian Cohort Naïve Antiretrovirals (ICONA). METHODS: All PLWH (2009-2020) under antiretroviral treatment with at least 2 consecutive HIV-RNA values ≤50 copies/mL before the date of syphilis diagnosis and at least one HIV-RNA determination after the syphilis event were enrolled. A control group of PLWH without syphilis was matched for mode of HIV transmission. Outcomes were defined using the first HIV-RNA measure in the time window ranging between -2 and +6 months of the diagnosis/index date. The primary outcome used a single value>200 copies/mL to define HIV-RNA elevation associated with risk of transmission. The association between syphilis infection and the protocol defined outcome was evaluated using logistic regression analysis. RESULTS: Nine hundred and twenty-six PLWH with a syphilis event were enrolled and matched with a random sample of 1370 PLWH without syphilis. Eighteen of the 926 (1.9%) with syphilis had ≥1 HIV-RNA>200 copies/mL in the window vs. 29/1370 (2.1%) of the not exposed (p=0.77). In the multivariable analysis adjusted for age, year of diagnosis/index date and clinical site, syphilis infection was not associated with the risk of HIV-RNA >200 copies/mL [adjusted Odds Ratio 0.81; 95% confidence interval 0.43-1.52, p=0.508]. CONCLUSIONS: We did not find any evidence for an association between syphilis infection and viral elevation >200 copies/mL.
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