Objective: To evaluate risk factors for mortality among patients with AIDS in the era of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), particularly the effect of cytomegalovirus (CMV).
Design: Prospective cohort study of patients with AIDS, conducted from 1998 through 2003.
Participants: One thousand five hundred eighty-three patients with AIDS, of whom 374 had CMV retinitis.
Methods: Patients were contacted every 3 months, with examinations at least every 6 months, in which standardized data were collected on AIDS history and treatment, eye examinations, and hematologic, virologic, and immunologic laboratory data.
Main outcome measure: Mortality.
Results: The overall mortality rate was 0.07 deaths/person-year. In a multivariate analysis, the following baseline risk factors were associated with an increased mortality: higher human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) viral load (relative risk [RR] = 4.6 for HIV viral load >100,000 copies/ml vs. <400 copies/ml; P<0.0001), lower CD4+ T-cell count at enrollment (RR = 3.8 for CD4+ T cell count 0-49 cells/microl vs. > or = 200 cells/microl; P<0.0001), CMV viral load > or = 400 copies/ml (RR = 1.9; P = 0.002), lower hemoglobin (RR = 1.7 for hemoglobin <10 g/dl; P = 0.009), a history of cryptococcal meningitis (RR = 1.7; P = 0.02), CMV retinitis (RR = 1.6; P = 0.0002), and Karnofsky score < or = 80 (RR = 1.4; P = 0.008).
Conclusions: In the era of HAART, CMV disease as manifested by CMV retinitis and a detectable CMV viral load were associated with an increased risk for mortality, even after adjusting for demographic, treatment, immunologic, and HIV virologic factors.