Détail du document
Identifiant

doi:10.1007/s40121-023-00817-x...

Auteur
Qi, Tangkai Chen, Fang Ma, Siyue Zhang, Renfang Liu, Li Wang, Zhenyan Tang, Yang Song, Wei Sun, Jianjun Yang, Junyang Xu, Shuibao Zhao, Bihe Shen, Yinzhong Chen, Jun
Langue
en
Editeur

Springer

Catégorie

Medicine & Public Health

Année

2023

Date de référencement

14/06/2023

Mots clés
hiv cryptococcal meningitis recurrence of symptom immune reconstitution inflammatory... thalidomide median days patients recurrence treating following symptom thalidomide hiv/cm
Métrique

Résumé

Introduction Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a serious and fatal fungal infection that affects individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

Despite treatment, recurrence of symptoms is common and could lead to poor outcomes.

Corticosteroids are not always useful in treating symptom recurrence following HIV/CM; thus, alternative therapy is needed.

Thalidomide has been reported to be effective in treating symptom recurrence in several patients with HIV/CM.

This retrospective study aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of thalidomide in the treatment of symptom recurrence following HIV/CM.

Methods Patients who were treated with thalidomide for symptom recurrence following HIV/CM were retrospectively included.

Clinical outcomes and adverse events were recorded and analyzed.

Results Sixteen patients admitted between July 2018 and September 2020 were included in the analysis.

During a median follow-up period of 295 (166, 419) days, all patients achieved clinical improvement in a median of 7 (4, 20) days.

Among them, nine (56%) achieved complete resolution of symptoms at a median of 187 (131, 253) days, including 40% (2/5) of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS), 50% (3/6) of patients with elevated ICP only, and 80% (4/5) of patients with symptoms only.

Seven (43%) patients experienced nine episodes of adverse events, but no severe adverse event attributable to thalidomide was observed.

None of the patients withdrew from thalidomide due to adverse events.

Conclusion Thalidomide appears to be effective and safe in treating different types of symptom recurrence in HIV/CM.

This study provides preliminary evidence supporting future randomized clinical trials to further investigate the efficacy and safety of thalidomide in treating symptom recurrence in this population.

Qi, Tangkai,Chen, Fang,Ma, Siyue,Zhang, Renfang,Liu, Li,Wang, Zhenyan,Tang, Yang,Song, Wei,Sun, Jianjun,Yang, Junyang,Xu, Shuibao,Zhao, Bihe,Shen, Yinzhong,Chen, Jun, 2023, Thalidomide for Recurrence of Symptoms following HIV-Associated Cryptococcal Meningitis, Springer

Document

Ouvrir

Partager

Source

Articles recommandés par ES/IODE IA

MELAS: Phenotype Classification into Classic-versus-Atypical Presentations
presentations mitochondrial strokelike patients variability phenotype clinical melas
Protocol for the promoting resilience in stress management (PRISM) intervention: a multi-site randomized controlled trial for adolescents and young adults with advanced cancer
cancer quality of life anxiety depression hope coping skills communication intervention randomized ayas outcomes resilience care trial cancer prism-ac advanced