International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2022)

Risk Factors Associated with Severe/Critical COVID-19 in People Living with HIV-1

  • Antoine Bachelard,
  • Aurelie Sautereau,
  • Marc Digumber,
  • Valentina Isernia,
  • Bao Phung,
  • Anne-Claire Lehur,
  • Sylvie Le Gac,
  • Roland Landman,
  • Yazdan Yazdanpanah,
  • Jade Ghosn

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 122
pp. 152 – 154

Abstract

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Introduction: Our objective was to determine the risk factors of a “severe/critical” form of COVID-19 in a cohort of people living with HIV-1 (PLWH1) followed in the Bichat University Hospital center in PARIS, FRANCE. Methods: This study was an observational retrospective monocentric cohort of PLWH1 diagnosed with COVID-19 between February 1 st and November 31 st, 2020. Risk factors associated with “severe/critical” forms were determined using stepwise forward selection. Results: One-hundred-and-twenty-nine PLWH1 with COVID-19 were included. COVID-19 diagnosis was confirmed in 98 cases (75.9%) and deemed probable according to the association of clinical criteria and contact case in 31 cases (24.1%). Clinical presentation of COVID-19 was “asymptomatic/mild/moderate” in 95 (73.6%), “severe” in 26 (21.7%) and “critical” in eight (6%). Patients with “severe/critical” COVID-19 tended to be older (median 54 year old), have a higher BMI (median 28.8 kg/m²) and were likely to have diabetes (9 versus 5) or chronic kidney disease (5 versus 2). Transgender women had higher risk too (OR: 4.9 (IC95: 1.35-24.0)). No association was observed between severity of COVID-19 and viral suppression or CD4 rates. Conclusion: Risk factors for severe COVID-19 were similar in PLWH1 than in the general population and PLWH1 transgender women were at higher risk.

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