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Comparison of HIV characteristics across 3 datasets: the Korea HIV/AIDS Cohort Study prospective, retrospective, and national reporting systemopen access

Authors
Choi, YunsuChoi, JunChoi, BoPark, BoKim, Shin-WooSong, JoonKim, JungKim, Sang
Issue Date
Jun-2024
Publisher
KOREAN SOC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Keywords
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome; Cohort studies; HIV; Research design; Selection bias
Citation
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH, v.46, pp 1 - 8
Pages
8
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH
Volume
46
Start Page
1
End Page
8
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/212986
DOI
10.4178/epih.e2024055
ISSN
1225-3596
2092-7193
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The Korea HIV/AIDS Cohort Study has been conducted prospectively for 18 years. However, it faces limitations in representing the entire population of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Korea. To address these limitations and validate the study design, we analyzed characteristics across several HIV datasets. METHODS: We compared epidemiological and clinical characteristics from 3 datasets: the Korea HIV/AIDS Cohort Study (dataset 1, n=1,562), retrospective cohort data (dataset 2, n=2,665), and the national HIV reporting system of the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) (dataset 3, n=17,403). RESULTS: The demographic characteristics of age, sex, and age at HIV diagnosis did not differ significantly across datasets. However, dataset 3 contained a higher proportion of patients diagnosed after 2008 (69.5%) than the other datasets. Regarding transmission routes, same-sex contact accounted for a greater proportion of dataset 1 (59.8%) compared to datasets 2 (20.9%) and 3 (32.6%). The proportion of patients with CD4 T-cell counts below 200/mm3 at HIV diagnosis was higher in datasets 1 (39.4%) and 2 (33.3%) compared to dataset 3 (16.3%). Initial HIV viral load measurements were not obtained for dataset 3. CONCLUSIONS: The Korea HIV/AIDS Cohort Study demonstrated representativeness regarding the demographic characteristics of Korean patients. Of the sources, dataset 1 contained the most data on transmission routes. While the KDCA data encompassed all HIV patients, it lacked detailed clinical information. To improve the representativeness of the Korea HIV/AIDS Cohort Study, we propose expanding and revising the cohort design and enrolling more patients who have been recently diagnosed.
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