Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its interconvertible sulfate derivative (DHEA-S) are human androgenic steroids that have been reported to inhibit viral expression and have been associated with a decreased risk of cancer. The relationship between serum DHEA and DHEA-S levels and subsequent progression to AIDS was investigated in a sample of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected men from the San Francisco Men's Health Study followed prospectively since 1984. Among 108 men seropositive for HIV at study entry and with CD4 lymphocyte counts of 200-499 microliters 24 months later, serum DHEA levels below the lower limit of normal (less than 180 ng/dl) at this later date were predictive of subsequent progression to AIDS (relative hazard = 2.34; 95% confidence interval = 1.18-4.63; P = .01) after controlling for hematocrit, age, and log absolute CD4 cell number in a Cox proportional hazards model. This is the first large prospective cohort in which an endocrinologic variable has been observed to independently predict progression to AIDS. These observations, in addition to recent in vitro data, suggest that DHEA might have a protective effect in HIV infection.
The authors used multivariate repeated-measures transition models to identify risk factors for two oral lesions related to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-candidiasis and hairy leukoplakia-in 152 HIV-infected blood transfusion recipients and hemophiliacs. Subjects were examined for occurrences of these lesions every 6 months from July 1985 through March 1993, yielding 1,076 study visits. It was found that, after adjustment for the CD4:CD8 T-lymphocyte ratio, patients with a history of candidiasis in the previous 18 months were at high risk of lesion recurrence. This risk increased with the number of prior episodes and with the recency of the episode(s). A history of hairy leukoplakia was less predictive of persistence of that lesion after adjustment for significant risk factors (including candidiasis and use of antifungal agents at the current examination, a low CD4:CD8 cell ratio, and age less than 40 years). The authors also found a high coprevalence of candidiasis and hairy leukoplakia in these subjects. These results suggest that HIV-infected patients with oral candidiasis should be carefully monitored for subsequent episodes over the next 12-18 months, and patients with either oral candidiasis or hairy leukoplakia and a low CD4:CD8 cell ratio should be carefully examined for the other type of lesion as well.
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