Effect of Antiretroviral Therapy on the Incidence
of Bacterial Pneumonia in Patients with Advanced HIV Infection [Sullivan
JH, et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2000; 162: 64]: The authors
report an analysis of the Moore Clinic database from Johns Hopkins University
on the experience with bacterial pneumonia among 1,898 HIV-infected patients
with CD4 counts < 200/mm3 for the
period 1993 - 1998. There were 352 episodes of pneumonia with an incidence
of 22.7 episodes/100 person-years in the first half of 1993 with a decrease
to a nadir of 9.1 episodes/100 person-years in the second half of 1997
(P = < 0.05). Risk factors for bacterial pneumonia included low CD4
cell counts, lack of a protease inhibitor-containing regimen, prior P.
carinii pneumonia and injection drug use. The authors concluded that there
has been a substantial decrease in bacterial pneumonia associated with
HAART. Comment: Bacterial pneumonia (or "enigmatic pneumonia") remains
the major cause of death in persons with HIV infection. This study shows
that the rate of presumed bacterial pneumonia has declined with the availability
of more effective antiretroviral therapy. Thus, this "opportunistic infection"
occurs less frequently among patients with immune reconstitution. This
report, as well as others, shows that injection drug use and low CD4 cell
counts both represent risks for bacterial pneumonia. Others have also
shown that prophylaxis with TMP-SMX or macrolides is associated with a
decreased risk; this was not shown in the present study for reasons that
are unexplained. posted 8/3/2000