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. 2022 Feb 16;14(4):986. doi: 10.3390/cancers14040986

Table 1.

General IRIS case definitions.

According to French et al., 2004 [24]
Diagnosis Requires Two Major Criteria (A+B) or Major Criterion (A) Plus Two Minor Criteria to Be Fulfilled
Major criteria Minor criteria
  • (A)

    Atypical presentation of opportunistic infections or tumors in patients responding to ART

  • Increase in blood CD4 T-cell count after starting ART

  • -

    Localized disease

  • -

    Exaggerated inflammatory reaction

  • -

    Atypical inflammatory response in affected tissues

  • -

    Progressive organ dysfunction or enlargement of pre-existing lesions after definite clinical improvement with pathogen-specific therapy before the initiation of ART and exclusion of treatment toxicity and new alternative diagnoses

  • Increase in an immune response specific to the relevant pathogen—e.g., delayed type hypersensitivity skin test response to mycobacterial antigens

  • (B)

    Decrease in plasma HIV RNA concentration by more than 1 log10 copies per mL

  • Spontaneous resolution of disease without specific antimicrobial therapy or tumor chemotherapy with continuation of ART

According to Shelburne et al., 2006 [31]
Criteria for IRIS Diagnosis Include:
  • HIV-infected patient

  • Receiving effective ART as evidenced by a decrease in HIV-[1] RNA concentration from baseline or an increase in CD4+ T cells from baseline (may lag behind HIV-1 RNA decrease)

  • Clinical symptoms consistent with inflammatory process

  • Clinical course not consistent with expected course of previously diagnosed opportunistic infection, expected course of newly diagnosed opportunistic infection, or drug toxicity