학술논문

The association between benzodiazepine use and greater risk of neurocognitive impairment is moderated by medical burden in people with HIV
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of NeuroVirology. 28(3)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Aging
HIV/AIDS
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Mental Health
Infectious Diseases
Benzodiazepines
Cognition Disorders
HIV Infections
Humans
Neuropsychological Tests
Retrospective Studies
HIV
Neurocognitive impairment
Comorbidities
Medical burden
Virology
Clinical sciences
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
Benzodiazepine use is linked to neurocognitive impairment (NCI) in the general population and people with HIV (PWH); however, this relationship may depend on age-related factors such as medical comorbidities, which occur at an elevated rate and manifest earlier in PWH. We retrospectively examined whether chronological age or medical burden, a clinical marker for aging, moderated the relationship between benzodiazepine use and NCI in PWH. Participants were 435 PWH on antiretroviral therapy who underwent neurocognitive and medical evaluations, including self-reported current benzodiazepine use. A medical burden index score (proportion of accumulated multisystem deficits) was calculated from 28 medical deficits. Demographically corrected cognitive deficit scores from 15 neuropsychological tests were used to calculate global and domain-specific NCI based on established cut-offs. Logistic regressions separately modeled global and domain-specific NCI as a function of benzodiazepine x age and benzodiazepine x medical burden interactions, adjusting for current affective symptoms and HIV disease characteristics. A statistically significant benzodiazepine x medical burden interaction (p = .006) revealed that current benzodiazepine use increased odds of global NCI only among those who had a high medical burden (index score > 0.3 as indicated by the Johnson-Neyman analysis), which was driven by the domains of processing speed, motor, and verbal fluency. No age x benzodiazepine interactive effects on NCI were present. Findings suggest that the relationship between BZD use and NCI among PWH is specific to those with greater medical burden, which may be a greater risk factor for BZD-related NCI than chronological age.