March 26, 2004
An important study by cardiologists, endocrinologists, and HIV physicians found more atherosclerosis in persons with HIV, and much faster progression, than in the general population.1 The measurement used in this study -- increasing thickness of the carotid artery, determined non-invasively by ultrasound examination -- is known to be a predictor of strokes and heart attacks in other populations. But this study could not tell how much of the increased risk is due to HIV itself, and how much is due to metabolic abnormalities caused by protease inhibitors or other HAART treatment in some patients.2
Age, LDL cholesterol, and smoking (cigarette pack-years) were strong predictors of atherosclerosis in the 148 persons with HIV who were studied; Latino race and high blood pressure were weaker predictors. Other risks like diabetes would not have shown up in this study because of the small number of volunteers affected. When matched controls were added to the analysis, HIV infection itself was a strong predictor of greater atherosclerosis, independent of other factors.
The authors gave some practical clinical suggestions at the end of the article: "Although randomized trials have not been done to demonstrate that treatment of risk factors reduces events in HIV-infected patients, it seems reasonable to extrapolate from other populations and to recommend aggressive control of risk factors. Smoking is particularly important because of its high prevalence. Hypertension should be treated. LDL cholesterol should be reduced to low levels, and hypertriglyceridemia should be controlled. If lipids are difficult to control, antiretroviral medication that may be contributing to lipid elevation should be reviewed and changed to medication with fewer lipid effects. Until further data are available, treating to the National Cholesterol Education Panel guidelines3 for patients with established vascular disease or diabetes seems prudent."
Here is the reference for the original article:
E Fontas, F van Leth, CA Sabin, and others. Lipid profiles in HIV-infected patients receiving combination antiretroviral therapy: Are different antiretroviral drugs associated with different lipid profiles? Journal of Infectious Diseases. March 15, 2004; volume 189, pages 1056-1074.
Copyright 2004 by John S. James. Permission granted for noncommercial reproduction, provided that our address and phone number are included if more than short quotations are used.
ISSN # 1052-4207
Back to the AIDS Treatment News March 26, 2004 contents page.
This article was provided by AIDS Treatment News. It is a part of the publication AIDS Treatment News.|
|