PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Association of serum albumin with markers of nutritional status among HIV-infected and uninfected Rwandan women.

  • Jean-Claude Dusingize,
  • Donald R Hoover,
  • Qiuhu Shi,
  • Eugene Mutimura,
  • Elizabeth Kiefer,
  • Mardge Cohen,
  • Kathryn Anastos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035079
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e35079

Abstract

Read online

The objectives of this study are to address if and how albumin can be used as an indication of malnutrition in HIV infected and uninfected Africans.In 2005, 710 HIV-infected and 226 HIV-uninfected women enrolled in a cohort study. Clinical/demographic parameters, CD4 count, albumin, liver transaminases; anthropometric measurements and Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis (BIA) were performed. Malnutrition outcomes were defined as body mass index (BMI), Fat-free mass index (FFMI) and Fat mass index (FMI). Separate linear predictive models including albumin were fit to these outcomes in HIV negative and HIV positive women by CD4 strata (CD4>350,200-350 and 350 cells/µl, serum albumin was not significantly associated with BMI, FFMI or FMI. Albumin was significantly associated with all three outcomes (p200.While serum albumin is widely used to indicate nutritional status it did not consistently predict malnutrition outcomes in HIV- women or HIV+ women with higher CD4. This result suggests that albumin may measure end stage disease as well as malnutrition and should not be used as a proxy for nutritional status without further study of its association with validated measures.