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  1. Staub T, Steurer J
    Praxis (Bern 1994), 1996 May 7;85(19):636-9.
    PMID: 8693232
    A 30-year-old female entered the emergency room for medical advice because of progressive deterioration of general health with headache, arthralgias, myalgias and fever after a vacation of three weeks in Malaysia and Hong Kong. Because of persistent fever, lymphadenopathy, slight leuco- and thrombocytopenia and only insignificantly elevated humoral signs of an inflammatory process, the patient was treated symptomatically after exclusion of malaria. A viral disease was suspected. Two days later, an exanthema erupted suddenly on the trunk. Pinhead-sized livid, flat macules, increasing in size within hours and spreading to the extremities, were observed. Further investigations revealed a significantly elevated titer of IgG directed against rickettsia conorii, leading to the diagnosis of Mediterranean spotted fever. Under antibiotic treatment with tetracycline, the aforementioned findings regressed within few days, and the patient recovered completely.
  2. Lundgren JD, Babiker AG, Sharma S, Grund B, Phillips AN, Matthews G, et al.
    NEJM Evid, 2023 Mar;2(3).
    PMID: 37213438 DOI: 10.1056/evidoa2200302
    BACKGROUND: For people with HIV and CD4+ counts >500 cells/mm3, early initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces serious AIDS and serious non-AIDS (SNA) risk compared with deferral of treatment until CD4+ counts are <350 cells/mm3. Whether excess risk of AIDS and SNA persists once ART is initiated for those who defer treatment is uncertain.

    METHODS: The Strategic Timing of AntiRetroviral Treatment (START) trial, as previously reported, randomly assigned 4684 ART-naive HIV-positive adults with CD4+ counts .500 cells/mm3 to immediate treatment initiation after random assignment (n = 2325) or deferred treatment (n= 2359). In 2015, a 57% lower risk of the primary end point (AIDS, SNA, or death) for the immediate group was reported, and the deferred group was offered ART. This article reports the follow-up that continued to December 31, 2021. Cox proportional-hazards models were used to compare hazard ratios for the primary end point from randomization through December 31, 2015, versus January 1, 2016, through December 31, 2021.

    RESULTS: Through December 31, 2015, approximately 7 months after the cutoff date from the previous report, the median CD4+ count was 648 and 460 cells/mm3 in the immediate and deferred groups, respectively, at treatment initiation. The percentage of follow-up time spent taking ART was 95% and 36% for the immediate and deferred groups, respectively, and the time-averaged CD4+ difference was 199 cells/mm3. After January 1, 2016, the percentage of follow-up time on treatment was 97.2% and 94.1% for the immediate and deferred groups, respectively, and the CD4+ count difference was 155 cells/mm3. After January 1, 2016, a total of 89 immediate and 113 deferred group participants experienced a primary end point (hazard ratio of 0.79 [95% confidence interval, 0.60 to 1.04] versus hazard ratio of 0.47 [95% confidence interval, 0.34 to 0.65; P<0.001]) before 2016 (P=0.02 for hazard ratio difference).

    CONCLUSIONS: Among adults with CD4+ counts >500 cells/mm3, excess risk of AIDS and SNA associated with delaying treatment initiation was diminished after ART initiation, but persistent excess risk remained. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and others.).

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