PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Prevalence and correlates of restless legs syndrome in men living with HIV.

  • Douglas M Wallace,
  • Maria L Alcaide,
  • William K Wohlgemuth,
  • Deborah L Jones Weiss,
  • Claudia Uribe Starita,
  • Sanjay R Patel,
  • Valentina Stosor,
  • Andrew Levine,
  • Carling Skvarca,
  • Dustin M Long,
  • Anna Rubtsova,
  • Adaora A Adimora,
  • Stephen J Gange,
  • Amanda B Spence,
  • Kathryn Anastos,
  • Bradley E Aouizerat,
  • Yaacov Anziska,
  • Naresh M Punjabi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258139
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. e0258139

Abstract

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BackgroundData on the prevalence and correlates of restless legs syndrome (RLS) in people with HIV are limited. This study sought to determine the prevalence of RLS, associated clinical correlates, and characterize sleep-related differences in men with and without HIV.MethodsSleep-related data were collected in men who have sex with men participating in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS). Demographic, health behaviors, HIV status, comorbidities, and serological data were obtained from the MACS visit coinciding with sleep assessments. Participants completed questionnaires, home polysomnography, and wrist actigraphy. RLS status was determined with the Cambridge-Hopkins RLS questionnaire. RLS prevalence was compared in men with and without HIV. Multinomial logistic regression was used to examine correlates of RLS among all participants and men with HIV alone. Sleep-related differences were examined in men with and without HIV by RLS status.ResultsThe sample consisted of 942 men (56% HIV+; mean age 57 years; 69% white). The prevalence of definite RLS was comparable in men with and without HIV (9.1% vs 8.7%). In multinomial regression, HIV status was not associated with RLS prevalence. However, white race, anemia, depression, and antidepressant use were each independently associated with RLS. HIV disease duration was also associated with RLS. Men with HIV and RLS reported poorer sleep quality, greater sleepiness, and had worse objective sleep efficiency/fragmentation than men without HIV/RLS.ConclusionsThe prevalence of RLS in men with and without HIV was similar. Screening for RLS may be considered among people with HIV with insomnia and with long-standing disease.