Outline

JEIM

Prospective Longitudinal Evaluation of CD4+ T-Lymphocyte Recovery and Hepatotoxicity Following Initiation of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Adult HIV Patients

Author(s): Henry Onyebutulem1, Ganiyu B. Agboola2, Nafisat O. Akintayo-Usman3, Ibiwumi N. Isola4, Florence C. Umeozulu1, Patrick O. Osho5, Mattew T. Oluwole5
1Department of Internal Medicine, Nile University of Nigeria, Nigeria.
2Department of Clinical Laboratory, Equitable Health Access Initiative, Lagos, Lagos State, Nigeria.
3Department of Medical-Surgical Nursing, Osun State School of Nursing, Osogbo, Nigeria
4Department of Biochemistry, Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria.
5Department of Hematology/Virology, State Specialist Hospital, Akure, Ondo State, Nigeria.
[mla_citation]

Abstract

Previous cross-sectional studies suggest that highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
may be associated with mild hepatotoxicity. However, temporal patterns and incidence
of liver enzyme alterations following HAART initiation remain unclear. To prospectively
evaluate CD4+ T-cell recovery and liver enzyme changes before and after HAART initiation
in adult HIV-infected patients. A 12-month prospective cohort study was conducted among
180 HAART-naïve HIV-positive adults. CD4+ count, ALT, AST, ALP, total bilirubin, and
albumin were measured at baseline, 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months
after HAART initiation. Hepatotoxicity was graded using standard toxicity criteria. CD4+
counts significantly increased from baseline \((mean 248 ± 96 cells/ μL)\) to 12 months \((489± 155 cells/ μL, p<0.001)\). Transient elevations of ALT and AST were observed at 6–12 weeks, with \(14.4%\) developing Grade 1–2 hepatotoxicity. Persistent hepatotoxicity beyond 6 months occurred in 3.3% of participants. Regimen switching was associated with increased risk. HAART initiation is associated with early transient hepatocellular enzyme elevations, while long-term severe hepatotoxicity is uncommon. Structured baseline and early follow-up monitoring is essential, particularly within the first 12 weeks of therapy.

Keywords
HAART, Hepatotoxicity, Liver Enzymes, Antiretroviral Therapy, Longitudinal Cohort.

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