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. 2022 Mar 1;36(3):399-407.
doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000003125.

Assessment of coronary inflammation in antiretroviral treated people with HIV infection and active HIV/hepatitis C virus co-infection

Affiliations

Assessment of coronary inflammation in antiretroviral treated people with HIV infection and active HIV/hepatitis C virus co-infection

Jean Jeudy et al. AIDS. .

Abstract

Objective: People with HIV (PWH) and co-infected with hepatitis C virus (PWH + HCV) have increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Peri-coronary inflammation, measured by fat attenuation index (FAI) on coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), independently predicts cardiovascular risk in the general population but has not been studied in the PWH + HCV population. We tested whether peri-coronary inflammation is increased in PWH or PWH + HCV, and whether inflammation changes over time.

Design: Cross-sectional analysis to determine FAI differences among groups. Longitudinal analysis in PWH to assess changes in inflammation over time.

Methods: Age-matched and sex-matched seropositive groups (PWH and PWH + HCV) virologically suppressed on antiretroviral therapy, HCV viremic, and without prior CVD and matched controls underwent CCTA. Peri-coronary FAI was measured around the proximal right coronary artery (RCA) and left anterior descending artery (LAD). Follow-up CCTA was performed in 22 PWH after 20.6-27.4 months.

Results: A total of 101 participants (48 women) were studied (60 PWH, 19 PWH + HCV and 22 controls). In adjusted analyses, peri-coronary FAI did not differ between seropositive groups and controls. Low attenuation coronary plaque was significantly less common in seropositive groups compared with controls (LAD, P = 0.035; and RCA, P = 0.017, respectively). Peri-coronary FAI values significantly progressed between baseline and follow-up in PWH (RCA: P = 0.001, LAD: P = <0.001).

Conclusion: PWH and PWH + HCV without history of CVD do not have significantly worse peri-coronary inflammation, assessed by FAI, compared with matched controls. However, peri-coronary inflammation in mono-infected PWH significantly increased over approximately 22 months. FAI measures may be an important imaging biomarker for tracking asymptomatic CVD progression in PWH.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: None of the authors has any conflict of interest related to the preparation, analysis and submission of this manuscript. No author has any financial disclosure to report related to this publication, as confirmed by each one individually.

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