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Cumulative Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)-1 Viremia Is Associated with Increased Risk of Multimorbidity among US Women with HIV, 1997-2019

  • 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 N. Sheth
  • , Lauren F. Collins

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

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) <200copies/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.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberofac702
JournalOpen Forum Infectious Diseases
Volume10
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2023

Keywords

  • cumulative HIV-1 viremia
  • multimorbidity
  • non-AIDS comorbidities
  • viremia copy-years
  • women with HIV

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