by
Mark H Kuniholm;
Elizabeth Vasquez;
Allison A Appleton;
Lawrence Kingsley;
Frank J Palella;
Matthew Budoff;
Erin D Michos;
Ervin Fox;
Deborah Jones;
Adaora A Adimora;
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Gypsyamber D'souza;
Kathleen M Weber;
Phyllis C Tien;
Michael Plankey;
Anjali Sharma;
Deborah R Gustafson
Objective: To understand the relationship between cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and frailty among men (MWH) and women living with HIV (WWH), or at risk for HIV. Design: We considered 10-year coronary heart disease and atherosclerotic CVD risk by Framingham risk score (FRS, 2001 National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Program III) and Pooled Cohort Equations (PCE, 2013 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association) in relation to the Fried Frailty Phenotype (FFP) in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) and Women’s Interagency HIV Study (WIHS). Methods: FFP was ascertained in MACS from 2004 to 2019 and in WIHS from 2005 to 2006 and 2011 – 2019. FFP score at least three of five components defined frailty. Repeated measures logistic regression (both cohorts) and Cox proportional hazards regression (MACS) were performed, controlled for education, income, cholesterol medication and hepatitis C virus serostatus, and among MWH and WWH, CD4þ cell count/ml, antiretroviral therapy, and HIV viral load. Results: There were 5554 participants (1265 HIV seronegative/1396 MWH; 768 seronegative/1924 WWH) included. Among men, high-risk FRS was associated with increased risk of incident frailty among seronegative [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR)) ¼ 2.12, 95% confidence interval (CI):1.22 – 3.69] and MWH (aHR ¼ 2.19, 95% CI: 1.33 – 3.61). Similar associations were seen with high-risk PCE and incident frailty among SN (aHR ¼ 1.88, 95% CI: 1.48 – 2.39) and MWH (aHR ¼ 1.59, 95% CI: 1.26 – 2.00). Among women, high-risk PCE was associated with frailty in SN [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) ¼ 1.43, 95% CI: 1.02 – 2.00] and WWH (aOR ¼ 1.36, 95% CI: 1.08 – 1.71); however, high-risk FRS was not (seronegative: aOR ¼ 1.03, 95% CI: 0.30 – 3.49; WWH: aOR ¼ 0.86, 95% CI: 0.23 – 3.20). Conclusion: Higher CVD risk was associated with increased frailty regardless of HIV serostatus among men and women. These findings may inform clinical practices of screening for frailty.
by
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Dionna Williams;
LH Rubin;
JA O'Halloran;
Y Li;
KC Fitzgerald;
R Dastgheyb;
AL Damron;
PM Maki;
AB Spence;
A Sharma;
DR Gustafson;
J Milam;
KM Weber;
AA Adimora;
MA Fischl;
D Konkle-Parker;
Y Xu
Objective: Women with HIV(WWH) are more likely to discontinue/change antiretroviral therapy(ART) due to side effects including neuropsychiatric symptoms. Efavirenz and integrase strand transfer inhibitors(INSTIs) are particularly concerning. We focused on these ART agents and neuropsychiatric symptoms in previously developed subgroups of WWH that differed on key sociodemographic factors as well as longitudinal behavioral and clinical profiles. WWH from the Women’s Interagency HIV Study were included if they had ART data available, completed the Perceived Stress Scale-10 and PTSD Checklist-Civilian. Questionnaires were completed biannually beginning in 2008 through 2016. To examine ART-symptom associations, constrained continuation ratio model via penalized maximum likelihood were fit within 5 subgroups of WWH. Data from 1882 WWH contributed a total of 4598 observations. 353 women were previously defined as primarily having well-controlled HIV with vascular comorbidities, 463 with legacy effects(CD4 nadir < 250cells/mL), 274 aged ≤ 45 with hepatitis, 453 between 35–55 years, and 339 with poorly-controlled HIV/substance users. INSTIs, but not efavirenz, were associated with symptoms among key subgroups of WWH. Among those with HIV legacy effects, dolutegravir and elvitegravir were associated with greater stress/anxiety and avoidance symptoms(P’s < 0.01); dolutegravir was also associated with greater re-experiencing symptoms(P = 0.005). Elvitegravir related to greater re-experiencing and hyperarousal among women with well-controlled HIV with vascular comorbidities(P’s < 0.022). Raltegravir was associated with less hyperarousal, but only among women aged ≤ 45 years(P = 0.001). The adverse neuropsychiatric effects of INSTIs do not appear to be consistent across all WWH. Key characteristics (e.g., age, hepatitis positivity) may need consideration to fully weight the risk–benefit ratio of dolutegravir and elvitegravir in WWH. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
by
Ellen S. Chan;
Alan L. Landay;
Todd T. Brown;
Heather J. Ribaudo;
Paria Mirmonsef;
Ighoverha Ofotokun;
M. Neale Weitzmann;
Jeffrey Martinson;
Karin L. Klingman;
Joseph J. Eron;
Carl J. Fichtenbaum;
Jill Plants;
Babafemi O. Taiwo
Objective: Studies exploring the immunologic effects of maraviroc (MVC) have produced mixed results; hence, it remains unclear whether MVC has unique immunologic effects in comparison with other antiretroviral drugs. We sought to determine whether MVC has differential effects compared with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) during initial antiretroviral therapy. Design: Prospective study in AIDS Clinical Trials Group A5303, a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (N=262) of MVC vs. TDF, each combined with boosted darunavir and emtricitabine. Methods: A total of 31 cellular and soluble biomarkers were assayed at weeks 0 and 48. Polychromatic flow cytometry was performed on cryopreserved peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Soluble markers were assayed in plasma using ELISA kits. Analyses were as treated. Results: Analyses included 230 participants (119 in MVC arm and 111 in TDF arm). Over 48 weeks of treatment, no significant differences were detected in declines in markers of inflammation and activation with MVC vs. TDF. A greater CD4 + T-cell count increase (median + 234 vs. + 188 cells/μl, P=0.036), a smaller CD8 + T-cell count decrease (-6 vs. -109 cells/μl, P=0.008), and a smaller CD4 + :CD8 + ratio increase (0.26 vs. 0.39, P=0.003) occurred with MVC. Among participants with a baseline CD4 + :CD8 + ratio less than 1, a smaller proportion of MVC group normalized to a ratio greater than 1 at week 48 (15 and 36%, P < 0.001). Conclusion: MVC resulted in less improvement in the CD4 + :CD8 + ratio driven by greater increase in CD4 + cell count but smaller decline in CD8 + cell count. Changes in soluble or cellular biomarkers of inflammation and immune activation were not different between MVC and TDF.
by
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Anandi Sheth;
Christina Mehta;
Lauren Collins;
FJ Palella;
JN Holloway;
V Stosor;
JE Lake;
TT Brown;
EF Topper;
S Naggie;
K Anastos;
TN Taylor;
S Kassaye;
AL French;
AA Adimora;
MA Fischl;
MC Kempf;
SL Koletar;
PC Tien
Importance: Despite aging-related comorbidities representing a growing threat to quality-of-life and mortality among persons with HIV (PWH), clinical guidance for comorbidity screening and prevention is lacking. Understanding comorbidity distribution and severity by sex and gender is essential to informing guidelines for promoting healthy aging in adults with HIV. Objective: To assess the association of human immunodeficiency virus on the burden of aging-related comorbidities among US adults in the modern treatment era. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional analysis included data from US multisite observational cohort studies of women (Women's Interagency HIV Study) and men (Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study) with HIV and sociodemographically comparable HIV-seronegative individuals. Participants were prospectively followed from 2008 for men and 2009 for women (when more than 80% of participants with HIV reported antiretroviral therapy use) through last observation up until March 2019, at which point outcomes were assessed. Data were analyzed from July 2020 to April 2021. Exposures: HIV, age, sex. Main Outcomes and Measures: Comorbidity burden (the number of total comorbidities out of 10 assessed) per participant; secondary outcomes included individual comorbidity prevalence. Linear regression assessed the association of HIV status, age, and sex with comorbidity burden. Results: A total of 5929 individuals were included (median [IQR] age, 54 [46-61] years; 3238 women [55%]; 2787 Black [47%], 1153 Hispanic or other [19%], 1989 White [34%]). Overall, unadjusted mean comorbidity burden was higher among women vs men (3.4 [2.1] vs 3.2 [1.8]; P = .02). Comorbidity prevalence differed by sex for hypertension (2188 of 3238 women [68%] vs 2026 of 2691 men [75%]), psychiatric illness (1771 women [55%] vs 1565 men [58%]), dyslipidemia (1312 women [41%] vs 1728 men [64%]), liver (1093 women [34%] vs 1032 men [38%]), bone disease (1364 women [42%] vs 512 men [19%]), lung disease (1245 women [38%] vs 259 men [10%]), diabetes (763 women [24%] vs 470 men [17%]), cardiovascular (493 women [15%] vs 407 men [15%]), kidney (444 women [14%] vs 404 men [15%]) disease, and cancer (219 women [7%] vs 321 men [12%]). In an unadjusted model, the estimated mean difference in comorbidity burden among women vs men was significantly greater in every age strata among PWH: age under 40 years, 0.33 (95% CI, 0.03-0.63); ages 40 to 49 years, 0.37 (95% CI, 0.12-0.61); ages 50 to 59 years, 0.38 (95% CI, 0.20-0.56); ages 60 to 69 years, 0.66 (95% CI, 0.42-0.90); ages 70 years and older, 0.62 (95% CI, 0.07-1.17). However, the difference between sexes varied by age strata among persons without HIV: age under 40 years, 0.52 (95% CI, 0.13 to 0.92); ages 40 to 49 years, -0.07 (95% CI, -0.45 to 0.31); ages 50 to 59 years, 0.88 (95% CI, 0.62 to 1.14); ages 60 to 69 years, 1.39 (95% CI, 1.06 to 1.72); ages 70 years and older, 0.33 (95% CI, -0.53 to 1.19) (P for interaction = .001). In the covariate-adjusted model, findings were slightly attenuated but retained statistical significance. Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study, the overall burden of aging-related comorbidities was higher in women vs men, particularly among PWH, and the distribution of comorbidity prevalence differed by sex. Comorbidity screening and prevention strategies tailored by HIV serostatus and sex or gender may be needed.
Background: Lopinavir (LPV)/ritonavir (RTV) co-formulation (LPV/RTV) is a widely used protease inhibitor (PI)-based regimen to treat HIV-infection. As with all PIs, the trough concentration (C trough) is a primary determinant of response, but the optimum exposure remains poorly defined. The primary objective was to develop an integrated LPV population pharmacokinetic model to investigate the influence of α-1-acid glycoprotein and link total and free LPV exposure to pharmacodynamic changes in HIV-1 RNA and assess viral dynamic and drug efficacy parameters. Methods: Data from 35 treatment-naïve HIV-infected patients initiating therapy with LPV/RTV 400/100 mg orally twice daily across two studies were used for model development and simulations using ADAPT. Total LPV (LPVt) and RTV concentrations were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet (UV) detection. Free LPV (LPVf) concentrations were measured using equilibrium dialysis and mass spectrometry. Results: The LPVt typical value of clearance ( CLLPVt/F) was 4.73 L/h and the distribution volume (V LPVt) was 55.7 L. The clearance ( CL LPVt/F) and distribution volume (V fF) for LPVf were 596 L/h and 6,370 L, respectively. The virion clearance rate was 0.0350 h-1. The simulated LPVLPVttrough values at 90 % (EC90) and 95 % (EC95) of the maximum response were 316 and 726 ng/mL, respectively. Conclusions: The pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model provides a useful tool to quantitatively describe the relationship between LPV/RTV exposure and viral response. This comprehensive modelling and simulation approach could be used as a surrogate assessment of antiretroviral (ARV) activity where adequate early-phase dose-ranging studies are lacking in order to define target trough concentrations and possibly refine dosing recommendations.
by
Juan Lin;
Erik Ehinger;
David B Hanna;
Qibin Qi;
Tao Wang;
Yanal Ghosheh;
Karin Mueller;
Kathryn Anastos;
Jason M Lazar;
Wendy J Mack;
Phyllis C Tien;
Joan W Berman;
Mardge H Cohen;
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Stephen Gange;
Chenglong Liu;
Sonya L Heath;
Russell P Tracy;
Howard N Hodis;
Alan L Landay;
Klaus Ley;
Robert C Kaplan
Persistent inflammation contributes to the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD) as an HIV-associated comorbidity. Innate immune cells such as monocytes are major drivers of inflammation in men and women with HIV. The study objectives are to examine the contribution of circulating non-classical monocytes (NCM, CD14dimCD16+) and intermediate monocytes (IM, CD14+CD16+) to the host response to long-term HIV infection and HIV-associated CVD. Women with and without chronic HIV infection (H) were studied. Subclinical CVD (C) was detected as plaques imaged by B-mode carotid artery ultrasound. The study included H-C-, H+C-, H-C+, and H+C+ participants (23 of each, matched on race/ethnicity, age and smoking status), selected from among enrollees in the Women’s Interagency HIV Study. We assessed transcriptomic features associated with HIV or CVD alone or comorbid HIV/CVD comparing to healthy (H-C-) participants in IM and NCM isolated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. IM gene expression was little affected by HIV alone or CVD alone. In IM, coexisting HIV and CVD produced a measurable gene transcription signature, which was abolished by lipid-lowering treatment. In NCM, versus non-HIV controls, women with HIV had altered gene expression, irrespective of whether or not they had comorbid CVD. The largest set of differentially expressed genes was found in NCM among women with both HIV and CVD. Genes upregulated in association with HIV included several potential targets of drug therapies, including LAG3 (CD223). In conclusion, circulating monocytes from patients with well controlled HIV infection demonstrate an extensive gene expression signature which may be consistent with the ability of these cells to serve as potential viral reservoirs. Gene transcriptional changes in HIV patients were further magnified in the presence of subclinical CVD.
by
Erin Scherer;
Martin Backer;
Karen Carvajal;
Lara Danziger-Isakov;
Sharon Frey;
Leigh M. Howard;
Felicia Scaggs Huang;
Angelica C. Kottkamp;
Tara Reid;
Maria C. Rodriguez-Barradas;
Helen C. S. Karita;
Zheyi Teoh;
Anna Wald;
Jennifer Whitaker;
Zanthia Wiley;
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Kathryn M. Edwards
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and associated increase in family care responsibilities resulted in unsustainable personal and professional workloads for infectious diseases (ID) faculty on the front lines. This was especially true for early-stage faculty (ESF), many of whom had caregiving responsibilities. In addition, female faculty, underrepresented in medicine and science faculty and particularly ESF, experienced marked declines in research productivity, which significantly impacts career trajectories. When combined with staffing shortages due to an aging workforce and suboptimal recruitment and retention in ID, these work-life imbalances have brought the field to an inflection point. We propose actionable recommendations and call on ID leaders to act to close the gender, racial, and ethnic gaps to improve the recruitment, retention, and advancement of ESF in ID. By investing in systemic change to make the ID workforce more equitable, we can embody the shared ideals of diversity and inclusion and prepare for the next pandemic.
by
Zoey P. Morton;
C. Christina Mehta;
Tingyu Wang;
Frank J. Palella;
Susanna Naggie;
Elizabeth T. Golub;
Kathryn Anastos;
Audrey L. French;
Seble Kassaye;
Tonya N. Taylor;
Margaret A Fischl;
Adaora A. Adimora;
Mirjam-Colette Kempf;
Phyllis C. Tien;
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Anandi Sheth;
Lauren Collins
BACKGROUND: To evaluate the effect of cumulative human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 viremia on aging-related multimorbidity among women with HIV (WWH), we analyzed data collected prospectively among women who achieved viral suppression after antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation (1997-2019). METHODS: We included WWH with ≥2 plasma HIV-1 viral loads (VL) <200 copies/mL within a 2-year period (baseline) following self-reported ART use. Primary outcome was multimorbidity (≥2 nonacquired immune deficiency syndrome comorbidities [NACM] of 5 total assessed). The trapezoidal rule calculated viremia copy-years (VCY) as area-under-the-VL-curve. Cox proportional hazard models estimated the association of time-updated cumulative VCY with incident multimorbidity and with incidence of each NACM, adjusting for important covariates (eg, age, CD4 count, etc). RESULTS: Eight hundred six WWH contributed 6368 women-years, with median 12 (Q1-Q3, 7-23) VL per participant. At baseline, median age was 39 years, 56% were Black, and median CD4 was 534 cells/mm3. Median time-updated cumulative VCY was 5.4 (Q1-Q3, 4.7-6.9) log10 copy-years/mL. Of 211 (26%) WWH who developed multimorbidity, 162 (77%) had incident hypertension, 133 (63%) had dyslipidemia, 60 (28%) had diabetes, 52 (25%) had cardiovascular disease, and 32 (15%) had kidney disease. Compared with WWH who had time-updated cumulative VCY <5 log10, the adjusted hazard ratio of multimorbidity was 1.99 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.29-3.08) and 3.78 (95% CI, 2.17-6.58) for those with VCY 5-6.9 and ≥7 log10 copy-years/mL, respectively (P < .0001). Higher time-updated cumulative VCY increased the risk of each NACM. CONCLUSIONS: Among ART-treated WWH, greater cumulative viremia increased the risk of multimorbidity and of developing each NACM, and hence this may be a prognostically useful biomarker for NACM risk assessment in this population.
by
Dionna W Williams;
Bianca R Flores;
Yanxun Xu;
Yuezhe Wang;
Danyang Yu;
Brandilyn A Peters;
Adebola Adedimeji;
Tracey E Wilson;
Daniel Merenstein;
Phyllis C Tien;
Mardge H Cohen;
Kathleen M Weber;
Adaora A Adimora;
Ighovwerha Ofotokun;
Margaret Fischl;
Janet Turan;
Bülent Turan;
Geoffroy Laumet;
Alan L Landay;
Raha M Dastgheyb;
Stephen J Gange;
Sheri D Weiser;
Leah H Rubin
Neuropsychiatric complications are common among women with HIV (WWH). The pathophysiological mechanisms underlying these complications are not fully known but likely driven in part by immune modulation. We examined associations between T-cell activation states which are required to mount an effective immune response (activation, co-stimulation/normal function, exhaustion, senescence) and neuropsychiatric complications in WWH. 369 WWH (78% HIV RNA undetectable/<20cp/mL) enrolled in the Women's Interagency HIV Study completed neuropsychological testing and measures of depression (Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale-CES-D), self-reported stress levels (Perceived Stress Scale-10), and post-traumatic stress (PTSD Checklist-Civilian Scale). Multiparametric flow cytometry evaluated T-cell activation state. Partial least squares regressions were used to examine T-cell phenotypes and neuropsychiatric outcome associations after confounder adjustment. In the total sample and among virally suppressed (VS)-WWH, CD4+ T-cell exhaustion was associated with poorer learning and attention/working memory (P's < 0.05). In the total sample, CD4+ T-cell activation was associated with better attention/working memory and CD8+ T-cell co-stimulation and senescence was associated with poorer executive function (P's < 0.05). For mental health outcomes, in the total sample, CD4+ T-cell activation was associated with more perceived stress and CD4+ T-cell exhaustion was associated with less depressive symptoms (P's < 0.05). Among VS-WWH, CD4+ senescence was associated with less perceive stress and CD8+ T-cell co-stimulation and senescence was associated with higher depression (P's < 0.05). Together, results suggest the contribution of peripheral CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activation status to neuropsychiatric complications in WWH.