학술논문

Consistent use of lipid lowering therapy in HIV infection is associated with low mortality
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Infectious Diseases, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2021)
Subject
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
Language
English
ISSN
1471-2334
Abstract
Abstract Background In people living with HIV (PLWH), statins may be disproportionately effective but remain underutilized. A large prospective trial in patients with low to moderate cardiovascular (ASCVD) risk will reveal whether they should be considered in all PLWH. But its effect size may not apply to real-world PLWH with higher ASCVD and mortality risk. Also, the clinical role of non-statin lipid-lowering therapy (LLT) and LLT adherence in this population is unknown. Methods Comparative multi-level marginal structural model for all-cause mortality examining four time-updated exposure levels to LLT, antihypertensives, and aspirin in a virtual cohort of older PLWH. Incident coronary, cerebrovascular, and overall ASCVD events, serious infections, and new cancer diagnoses served as explanatory outcomes. Results In 23,276 HIV-infected US-veterans who were followed for a median of 5.2 years after virologic suppression overall mortality was 33/1000 patient years: > 3 times higher than in the US population. Use of antihypertensives or aspirin was associated with increased mortality. Past LLT use (> 1 year ago) had no effect on mortality. LLT exposure in the past year was associated with a reduced hazard ratio (HR) of death: 0.59, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.51–0.69, p 11/12 past months) the HR of death was 0.48 (CI: 0.35–0.66) for statin-only LLT, 0.34 (CI: 0.23–0.52) for combination LLT, and 0.27 (CI: 0.15–0.48) for statin-free LLT (p