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Using the national registry of HIV-infected veterans in research: lessons for the development of disease registries

Rabeneck L; Menke T; Simberkoff MS; Hartigan PM; Dickinson GM; Jensen PC; George WL; Goetz MB; Wray NP
Disease-specific registries have many important applications in epidemiologic, clinical and health services research. Since 1989 the Department of Veterans Affairs has maintained a national HIV registry. VA's HIV registry is national in scope, it contains longitudinal data and detailed resource utilization and clinical information. To describe the structure, function, and limitations of VA's national HIV registry, and to test its accuracy and completeness. The VA's national HIV registry contains data that are electronically extracted from VA's computerized comprehensive clinical and administrative databases, called Veterans Integrated Health Systems Technology and Architecture (VISTA). We examined the number of AIDS patients and the number of new patients identified to the registry, by year, through December 1996. We verified data elements against information obtained from the medical records at five VA sites. By December 1996, 40,000 HIV-infected patients had been identified to the registry. We encountered missing data and problems with data classification. Missing data occurred for some elements related to the computer programming that creates the registry (e.g., pharmacy files), and for other elements because manual entry is required (e.g., ethnicity). Lack of a standardized data classification system was a problem, especially for the pharmacy and laboratory files. In using VA's national HIV registry we have learned important lessons, which, if taken into account in the future, could lead to the creation of model disease-specific registries
PMID: 11750188
ISSN: 0895-4356
CID: 38167

Randomized Trials of a Neuraminidase Inhibitor to Prevent Influenza

Simberkoff MS
PMID: 11095855
ISSN: 1523-3847
CID: 101851

Clinical and socioeconomic determinants of health care use among HIV-infected patients in the Department of Veterans Affairs

Menke TJ; Rabeneck L; Hartigan PM; Simberkoff MS; Wray NP
This study estimates the impact of clinical and socioeconomic characteristics on health care use for HIV-infected patients. Data come from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) HIV Registry, which electronically extracts data from patients' automated medical records, and from patient interviews. Unlike prior studies, this analysis includes a staging system incorporating CD4 count and AIDS-defining diagnoses. Results showed that clinical factors were the most important determinants of health care use; socioeconomic variables were seldom significant. These findings were expected, since the VA is an equal access system, providing care regardless of socioeconomic status
PMID: 10892358
ISSN: 0046-9580
CID: 38168

Recently Published Controlled Trials of Pneumococcal Vaccine Efficacy in Adults

Simberkoff MS
PMID: 11095766
ISSN: 1523-3847
CID: 101852

Surrogate marker of preclinical tuberculosis in human immunodeficiency virus infection: antibodies to an 88-kDa secreted antigen of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Laal S; Samanich KM; Sonnenberg MG; Belisle JT; O'Leary J; Simberkoff MS; Zolla-Pazner S
Antibodies to purified, size-fractionated secreted proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in sera from patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and active tuberculosis (HIV/TB patients), and in stored sera obtained from the same patients prior to clinical manifestation of TB, were evaluated by ELISA, and the repertoire of antigens recognized was analyzed by immunoblotting. Compared with non-HIV/TB patients, HIV/TB patients had lower levels of anti-mycobacterial antibodies, and these were directed toward a restricted set of antigens. Antibodies to an 88-kDa secreted antigen were present in the sera of 74% of HIV/TB patients during the years (1.5-6) prior to manifestation of active, clinical tuberculosis, although only 66% were positive by the time tuberculosis was diagnosed. The presence of antibodies to the 88-kDa antigen can serve as a surrogate marker for identifying HIV-infected persons with active, subclinical disease who are at a high risk of developing clinical tuberculosis
PMID: 9207359
ISSN: 0022-1899
CID: 7953

Changes in plasma HIV RNA levels and CD4+ lymphocyte counts predict both response to antiretroviral therapy and therapeutic failure. VA Cooperative Study Group on AIDS

O'Brien WA; Hartigan PM; Daar ES; Simberkoff MS; Hamilton JD
BACKGROUND: Markers are needed for assessing response to antiretroviral therapy over time. The CD4+ lymphocyte count is one such surrogate, but it is relatively weak. OBJECTIVE: To assess the association of changes in plasma human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) RNA level and CD4+ lymphocyte count with progression to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). DESIGN: Analysis of data from a subset of patients in a multicenter, randomized, clinical trial. SETTING: Six Veterans Affairs medical centers and one U.S. Army medical center. PATIENTS: 270 symptomatic HIV-infected patients from the Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study on AIDS. INTERVENTION: Patients were randomly assigned to receive zidovudine or placebo initially; a cross-over protocol was established for patients receiving placebo who had disease progression. MEASUREMENTS: Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction on cryopreserved plasma samples, previously obtained CD4+ lymphocyte counts, and clinical events. RESULTS: For each decrease of 0.5 log10 copies/mL in plasma HIV RNA level, averaged over the 6 months after randomization, the relative risk (RR) for progression to AIDS was 0.67 (P < 0.001). In a subset of 70 treated patients with long-term follow-up, a return to baseline plasma HIV RNA levels within 6 months of randomization was associated with progression to AIDS (RR, 4.28; P = 0.004). Plasma HIV RNA levels or CD4+ lymphocyte counts over time were more strongly associated with progression to AIDS than were baseline levels or counts. CONCLUSIONS: An adequate virologic response after initiation of antiretroviral therapy seems to require a decrease in plasma HIV RNA level of at least 0.5 log10 copies/mL that is sustained for at least 6 months. The independent relation between plasma HIV RNA level and CD4+ lymphocyte count over time and clinical outcome suggests that the measurement of plasma HIV RNA level, in addition to the CD4+ lymphocyte count, has a role in guiding the management of antiretroviral therapy
PMID: 9182470
ISSN: 0003-4819
CID: 38170

A city-wide outbreak of a multiple-drug-resistant strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in New York

Moss AR; Alland D; Telzak E; Hewlett D Jr; Sharp V; Chiliade P; LaBombardi V; Kabus D; Hanna B; Palumbo L; Brudney K; Weltman A; Stoeckle K; Chirgwin K; Simberkoff M; Moghazeh S; Eisner W; Lutfey M; Kreiswirth B
SETTING: Incident patients with active tuberculosis (TB) resistant to two or more drugs in New York City hospitals in 1992. OBJECTIVE: To examine the New York-wide distribution of Public Health Research Institute (PHRI) strain W of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, an extremely drug-resistant strain identified by a 17-band Southern hybridization pattern using IS6110, during the peak tuberculosis year of 1992. We also compared strain W with other strains frequently observed in New York. DESIGN: Blinded retrospective study of stored M. tuberculosis cultures by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) DNA fingerprinting, and chart review. RESULTS: We found 112 cultures with the strain W fingerprint and 8 variants in 21 hospitals among incident patients hospitalized in 1992. Almost all isolates were resistant to four first-line drugs and kanamycin. This single strain made up at least 22% of New York City multiple-drug-resistant (MDR) TB in 1992, far more than any other strain. Almost all W-strain cases were acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. The cluster is the most drug-resistant cluster identified in New York and the largest IS6110 fingerprint cluster identified anywhere to date. CONCLUSION: Because recommended four-drug therapy will not sterilise this very resistant strain, there was a city-wide nosocomial outbreak of W-strain TB in the early 1990s among New York AIDS patients. Other frequently seen strains were either also very resistant, or, surprisingly, pansusceptible. Individual MDR strains can be spread widely in situations where AIDS and TB are both common
PMID: 9441074
ISSN: 1027-3719
CID: 62337

Site of disease and opportunistic infection predict survival in HIV-associated tuberculosis

Whalen, C; Horsburgh, C R; Hom, D; Lahart, C; Simberkoff, M; Ellner, J
OBJECTIVE:Infection with HIV adversely affects survival in patients with tuberculosis (TB), even when TB is effectively treated. The aim of this study was to identify the determinants of survival in HIV-associated TB. DESIGN/METHODS:Retrospective cohort study. SETTING/METHODS:Four US academic medical centers. PATIENTS/METHODS:An inception cohort of 112 HIV-infected patients (mean age 41 years, 96% men, 46% African American) with their first episode of culture-proven TB. OUTCOMES MEASURES/METHODS:Observed survival from the date of diagnosis of TB to the date of death or censoring. Independent variables included demographics, HIV-related conditions, risk behavior for HIV, absolute CD4+ counts, and site of disease with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. RESULTS:Of the 112 patients, 54 (48%) had pulmonary TB alone, 36 (32%) had both pulmonary and extra-pulmonary TB and 22 (20%) had extrapulmonary TB alone. Median CD4+ count was 95 x 10(6)/l (range, 2-767 x 10(6)/l). During follow-up, 45 patients (40%) died. Median survival was shortest in patients with both pulmonary and extrapulmonary disease (8.4 months), followed by extrapulmonary disease alone (15.6 months), then pulmonary disease (30.4 months; P < 0.001, log-rank test). Median survival was also reduced in patients with previous opportunistic infection and in those with CD4+ < 200 x 10(6)/l. In a proportional hazards regression analysis, which adjusted for CD4+ count, extrapulmonary disease and previous opportunistic infection were the only factors independently associated with shorter survival. Of the extrapulmonary sites of disease, TB meningitis was associated with the greatest risk of death. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The site of culture-proven TB at presentation and the history of previous opportunistic infection are important predictors of survival in HIV-infected patients with TB.
PMID: 9084792
ISSN: 0269-9370
CID: 3778122

Bacterial infections

Kovacs A; Leaf HL; Simberkoff MS
Non-opportunistic bacterial infections are an important cause of morbidity and mortality for HIV-infected adults and children. Factors associated with increased risk of these include altered B- and T-cell function; altered phagocytic cell function; skin and mucous membrane defects; and use of indwelling vascular catheters, antibiotics, or cytotoxic agents. The pathogens encountered most frequently are S. aureus, S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, Salmonella sp., and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Less commonly encountered organisms include Rhodococcus equi, Listeria monocytogenes, Shigella sp., and Nocardia asteroides, Strategies for prevention as well as diagnosis and treatment of these are discussed
PMID: 9093231
ISSN: 0025-7125
CID: 38171

Tuberculosis among Asians at a New York City hospital [Meeting Abstract]

Laraque, F; Lerner, CW; Brown, SM; Simberkoff, MS
ISI:A1996VN24600190
ISSN: 1058-4838
CID: 52757