Doctoral Degrees (Statistics)
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Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Statistics) by Subject "AIDS (Disease)--Data processing."
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Item Longitudinal clinical covariates influence on CD4+ cell count after seroconversion.(2019) Tinarwo, Partson.; Zewotir, Temesgen Tenaw.; North, Delia Elizabeth.The Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) pandemic is a global challenge. The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is notoriously known for weakening the immune system and opening channels for opportunistic infections. The Cluster of Difference 4 (CD4+) cells are mainly killed by the HIV and hence used as a health indicator for HIV infected patients. In the past, the CD4+ count diagnostics were very expensive and therefore beyond the reach of many in resource-limited settings. Accordingly, the CD4+ count’s clinical covariates were the potential diagnostic tools. From a different angle, it is essential to examine a trail of the clinical covariates effecting the CD4+ cell response. That is, inasmuch as the immune system regulates the CD4+ count fluctuations in reaction to the viral invasion, the body’s other complex functional systems are bound to adjust too. However, little is known about the corresponding adaptive behavioural patterns of the clinical covariates influence on the CD4+ cell count. The investigation in this study was carried out on data obtained from the Centre for the Programme of AIDS research in South Africa (CAPRISA), where initially, HIV negative patients were enrolled into different cohorts, for different objectives. These HIV negative patients were then followed up in their respective cohort studies. As soon as a patient seroconverted in any of the cohort studies, the patient was then enrolled again, into a new cohort of HIV positive patients only. The follow-up on the seroconvertants involved a simultaneous recording of repeated measurements of the CD4+ count and 46 clinical covariates. An extensive exploratory analysis was consequently performed with three variable reduction methods for high-dimensional longitudinal data to identify the strongest clinical covariates. The sparse partial least squares approach proved to be the most appropriate and a robust technique to adopt. It identified 18 strongest clinical covariates which were subsequently used to fit other sophisticated statistical models including the longitudinal multilevel models for assessing inter-individual variation in the CD4+ count due to each clinical covariate. Generalised additive mixed models were then used to gain insight into the CD4+ count trends and possible adaptive optimal set-points of the clinical covariates. To single out break-points in the change of linear relationships between the CD4+ count and the covariates, segmented regression models were employed. In getting to grips with the understanding of the highly complex and intertwined relationships between the CD4+ count, clinical covariates and the time lagged effects during the HIV disease progression, a Structural Equation Model (SEM) was constructed and fitted. The results showed that sodium consistently changed its effects at 132mEq/L and 140 mEq/L across all the post HIV infection phases. Generally, the covariate influence on the CD4+ count varied with infection phase and widely between individuals during the anti-retroviral therapy (ART). We conlude that there is evidence of covariate set-point adaptive behaviour to positively influence the CD4+ cell count during the HIV disease progression.