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          | U.S. 
              Women and Black and Hispanic Men Have Shorter Life Expectancy after 
              HIV Diagnosis
              
              
                
                 
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                        | SUMMARY: 
                          In the U.S., life expectancy after an HIV diagnosis 
                          has approximately doubled since the advent of effective 
                          combination antiretroviral 
                          therapy (ART), from 11 years in 1996 to 23 years 
                          in 2005, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
                          (CDC) researchers reported in the January 
                          2010 Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. 
                          However, national HIV surveillance data show that women 
                          do not live as long as men, and black and Hispanic men 
                          die sooner than white men. |  |  |  |   
                  |  |  |  |  |  |  By 
                Liz Highleyman
 
  Kathleen 
                McDavid Harrison with the CDC's National Center for HIV/AIDS, 
                Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention and colleagues estimated 
                life expectancy and average years of life lost after an HIV diagnosis 
                using population-based surveillance data for adults (age 13 years 
                or older) from 25 states that have used name-based HIV surveillance 
                since 1996. The analysis therefore excluded some states with large 
                HIV/AIDS caseloads -- including California and New York -- that 
                used anonymous reporting for part of this period. 
 The researchers modeled life expectancy after an HIV 
                diagnosis using a life table approach. They then compared 
                life expectancy of people with HIV to that of the general population 
                matched for age, sex, and race/ethnicity during the same calendar 
                year using vital statistics data from the National Center for 
                Health Statistics. Comparing the 2 figures allowed them to estimate 
                years of life lost.
 
 Results
 
                 
                  |  | A 
                    total of 220,646 people were diagnosed with HIV in the 25 
                    states between 1996 and 2005. |   
                  |  | A 
                    total of 10,366 deaths from any cause occurred (reported through 
                    the end of 2007). |   
                  |  | 74% 
                    of newly diagnosed individuals were male. |   
                  |  | By 
                    race/ethnicity, blacks accounted for 55% of those diagnosed, 
                    whites for 36%, and Hispanics/Latinos for 9% (there was too 
                    little data for Asians, Pacific Islanders, American Indians, 
                    and Alaska and Hawaii Natives to allow for stable estimates). |   
                  |  | One-third 
                    were diagnosed late, with a CD4 count < 200 cells/mm3 on 
                    their first test within 6 months after diagnosis. |   
                  |  | Among 
                    newly diagnosed males, 67% were exposed through male-to-male 
                    sexual contact, 16% through injection drug use, 10% through 
                    heterosexual contact, and 7% were both gay/bisexual men and 
                    injection drug users. |   
                  |  | Among 
                    females, 70% were exposed through heterosexual contact, 29% 
                    through injection drug use, and 2% with unknown transmission 
                    route. |   
                  |  | Overall, 
                    average life expectancy after HIV diagnosis increased from 
                    10.5 years in 1996 to 22.5 years in 2005. |   
                  |  | The 
                    largest 1 year increase was from 1996 to 1997, when combination 
                    ART using protease inhibitors came into widespread use. |   
                  |  | Life 
                    expectancy was longer for females than for males overall, 
                    but improved less over time: |   
                  |  | 
                       
                        |  | Females: 
                          from 12.6 years in 1996 to 23.6 in 2005; |   
                        |  | Males: 
                          from 9.9 years in 1996 to 22.0 years in 2005. |  |   
                  |  | In 
                    2005, life expectancy was longest for white men (25.5 years), 
                    followed by Hispanic men (22.6 years), then black men (19.9 
                    years). |   
                  |  | During 
                    the 2000-2005 period, Hispanic women had the longest life 
                    expectancy (24.2 years), followed by white women (22.1 years), 
                    then black women (20.6 years). |   
                  |  | Over 
                    the period as a whole, men who have sex with men and women 
                    who acquired HIV through heterosexual contact had longer life 
                    expectancies than injection drug users. |   
                  |  | As 
                    life expectancy increased, average years of life lost declined, 
                    from 32.9 years in 1996 to 21.2 years in 2005 (19.1 years 
                    for males, 22.7 years for females). |   
                Based on these findings, the researchers concluded, "Disparity 
                in life expectancy for females and both black and Hispanic males, 
                compared with males and white males, respectively, persists and 
                should be addressed."
 "Significant improvements were...experienced among all race/ethnic 
                groups and by both males (12 years) and females (11 years)," 
                they elaborated in their discussion. "Also to be celebrated 
                are the overall increases in life expectancy. Unfortunately, disparity 
                in life expectancy for black and Hispanic males, compared with 
                white males, persists."
 
 "Given the findings, further promotion of [HIV] testing initiatives 
                and opt-out testing will be paramount to increasing the proportion 
                of persons who are aware of their HIV infections and who then 
                reduce behavioral risk factors to slow the transmission of HIV," 
                they recommended. "Programs aimed at increasing access to 
                care of HIV-infected persons may improve the proportion of persons 
                being treated and thus lengthen survival."
 
 Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, 
                Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control 
                and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
 
 2/2/10
 ReferenceK McDavid Harrison, R Song, and X Zhang. Life Expectancy After 
                HIV Diagnosis Based on National HIV Surveillance Data From 25 
                States, United States. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency 
                Syndromes 53(1): 124-130 (Abstract).
 
 
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