The objective was to evaluate the association between antiretroviral therap
y and AIDS mortality in New York City (NYC). Design was a population-based
case-control study. We randomly selected 150 case patients and 150 control
patients whose AIDS diagnosis was made during 1994 to 1996 (male:female, 2:
1) from among 19,238 persons reported to the NYC Health Department HIV/AIDS
Reporting System (HARS). Case patients had died of AIDS-related causes in
1996. Control patients, category matched with case patients on gender, were
not known to have died by the end of 1996. Analysis was performed on 279 p
atients (142 cases and 137 controls). Cases and controls were similar in ag
e, gender, race, HIV transmission category, and health insurance coverage.
The median baseline CD4 count was 30 cells/mu L for those who died and 103
cells/mu L for survivors (p < .0.001). The prescription of HAART (antiretro
viral combination that includes at least one protease inhibitor) in 1996 wa
s strongly associated with survival in univariate analysis (OR = 5.1, 95%CI
= 2.5-10.2). This association remained in a logistic regression analysis a
fter adjusting for sex, age, race, health insurance status, HIV transmissio
n categories, year of AIDS diagnosis, baseline CD4 count, and other antitet
roviral therapy (AOR = 8.6, 95%CI = 3.5-20.7). Prescription of combination
therapy other than HAART in 1996 and baseline CD4 count were also associate
d with survival, but less strongly so. The survival benefit of HAART extend
s beyond the confines of a few highly selected patients into the "real worl
d," reducing AIDS deaths at the population level. This population-based stu
dy supports the Likelihood that the introduction of HAART in 1996 played a
primary role in the decline in NYC AIDS mortality.