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The relationship between HIV seroconversion illness, HIV test interval and time to AIDS in a seroconverter cohort.

Abstract:
Seroconversion illness is known to be associated with more rapid HIV disease progression. However, symptoms are often subjective and prone to recall bias. We describe symptoms reported as seroconversion illness and examine the relationship between illness, HIV test interval (time between antibody-negative and anibody-positive test dates) and the effect of both on time to AIDS from seroconversion. We used a Cox model, adjusting for age, sex, exposure group and year of estimated seroconversion. Of 1820 individuals, information on seroconversion illness was available for 1244 of whom 423 (34%) reported symptomatic seroconversion. Persons with a short test interval (< or = 2 months) were significantly more likely to report an illness than people with a longer interval (OR 6.76, 95% CI 4.75-9.62). Time to AIDS was significantly faster (P = 0.01) in those with a short test interval. The HIV test interval is a useful replacement for information on seroconversion illness in studies of HIV disease progression.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1017/s0950268803001377

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
NDM
Sub department:
NDM Experimental Medicine
Role:
Author


Journal:
Epidemiology and infection More from this journal
Volume:
131
Issue:
3
Pages:
1117-1123
Publication date:
2003-12-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1469-4409
ISSN:
0950-2688


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:422659
UUID:
uuid:1a92cc7d-ec89-46c5-b450-e694a5c2f6ed
Local pid:
pubs:422659
Source identifiers:
422659
Deposit date:
2014-02-08
ARK identifier:

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