Investigating the Risk Factors in Progression of HIV Disease Using an Illness-Death Multistate Model
Roghayyeh Hassanzadeh, Hossein Mahjub, Mohammad Mirzaei, Fariba Keramat, Maryam Farhadian

TL;DR
This study examines how risk factors affect the progression of HIV disease using a multistate model to track transitions between health states.
Contribution
The study introduces a multistate model to analyze HIV progression, incorporating intermediate events and risk factors.
Findings
Receiving ART significantly reduces the risk of transitioning from HIV to AIDS.
TB co-infection increases the risk of transitioning from HIV to AIDS and from AIDS to death.
Early diagnosis and adherence to treatment can reduce AIDS progression and mortality.
Abstract
The trend of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease progress is different for every patient. Some patients may experience events during the course of their disease that can affect disease progression and death. The main objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of risk factors in progression of HIV disease, taking into account intermediate events, using a multistate model. A retrospective cohort study. The current study used information from 673 HIV-infected adult patients registered at the Hamadan Provincial Health Center in Iran, between 1997 and 2023. A multistate framework was described to investigate the progression of HIV disease over time. Three states (HIV-infected, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome [AIDS], and death) and three possible transitions (from HIV to AIDS, from HIV to death, and from AIDS to death) were considered in this framework. An…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Impact and Responses
