PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

HIV disease, metabolic dysfunction and atherosclerosis: A three year prospective study.

  • Hann Low,
  • Anh Hoang,
  • Tatiana Pushkarsky,
  • Larisa Dubrovsky,
  • Elizabeth Dewar,
  • Maria-Silvana Di Yacovo,
  • Nigora Mukhamedova,
  • Lesley Cheng,
  • Catherine Downs,
  • Gary Simon,
  • Maria Saumoy,
  • Andrew F Hill,
  • Michael L Fitzgerald,
  • Paul Nestel,
  • Anthony Dart,
  • Jennifer Hoy,
  • Michael Bukrinsky,
  • Dmitri Sviridov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215620
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. e0215620

Abstract

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HIV infection is known to be associated with cardiometabolic abnormalities; here we investigated the progression and causes of these abnormalities. Three groups of participants were recruited: HIV-negative subjects and two groups of treatment-naïve HIV-positive subjects, one group initiating antiretroviral treatment, the other remaining untreated. Intima-media thickness (cIMT) increased in HIV-positive untreated group compared to HIV-negative group, but treatment mitigated the difference. We found no increase in diabetes-related metabolic markers or in the level of inflammation in any of the groups. Total cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol and apoB levels were lower in HIV-positive groups, while triglyceride and Lp(a) levels did not differ between the groups. We found a statistically significant negative association between viral load and plasma levels of total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, apoA-I and apoB. HIV-positive patients had hypoalphalipoproteinemia at baseline, and we found a redistribution of sub-populations of high density lipoprotein (HDL) particles with increased proportion of smaller HDL in HIV-positive untreated patients, which may result from increased levels of plasma cholesteryl ester transfer protein in this group. HDL functionality declined in the HIV-negative and HIV-positive untreated groups, but not in HIV-positive treated group. We also found differences between HIV-positive and negative groups in plasma abundance of several microRNAs involved in lipid metabolism. Our data support a hypothesis that cardiometabolic abnormalities in HIV infection are caused by HIV and that antiretroviral treatment itself does not influence key cardiometabolic parameters, but mitigates those affected by HIV.