학술논문

Multiple substance use, inflammation and cardiac stretch in women living with HIV
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Cardiovascular
Substance Misuse
HIV/AIDS
Infectious Diseases
Heart Disease
Good Health and Well Being
Biomarkers
Cardiovascular Diseases
Cohort Studies
Female
HIV Infections
Heart Failure
Humans
Inflammation
Middle Aged
Peptide Fragments
Risk Factors
Substance-Related Disorders
HIV
Women
s ubstance use
NT-proBNP
STNFR2
substance use
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Substance Abuse
Biochemistry and cell biology
Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundCardiovascular disease (CVD) and heart failure (HF) are disproportionately high in people living with HIV and differ by sex. Few CVD-related studies focus on drug use, yet it is common in low-income women living with HIV (WLWH) and increases cardiac dysfunction.SettingWe recruited unsheltered and unstably housed WLWH from San Francisco community venues to participate in a six-month cohort study investigating linkages between drug use, inflammation, and cardiac dysfunction.MethodsAdjusting for CVD risk factors, co-infections, medications, and menopause, we examined the effects of toxicology-confirmed drug use and inflammation (C-reactive protein, sCD14, sCD163 and sTNFR2) on levels of NT-proBNP, a biomarker of cardiac stretch and HF.ResultsAmong 74 WLWH, the median age was 53 years and 45 % were Black. At baseline, 72 % of participants had hypertension. Substances used included tobacco (65 %), cannabis (53 %), cocaine (49 %), methamphetamine (31 %), alcohol (28 %), and opioids (20 %). Factors significantly associated with NT-proBNP included cannabis use (Adjusted Relative Effect [ARE]: -39.6 %) and sTNFR2 (ARE: 65.5 %). Adjusting for heart failure and restricting analyses to virally suppressed persons did not diminish effects appreciably. Cannabis use was not significantly associated with sTNFR2 and did not change the association between sTNFR2 and NT-proBNP.ConclusionsAmong polysubstance-using WLWH, NT-proBNP levels signaling cardiac stretch were positively associated with sTNFR2, but 40 % lower in people who used cannabis. Whether results suggest that cardiovascular pathways associated with cannabis use mitigate cardiac stress and dysfunction independent of inflammation in WLWH who use multiple substances merits further investigation.