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HIV-related
Lipodystrophy: Prevalence, Severity and Correlates of Risk in Australia
The
goal of the present study, conducted at the National Center in HIV
Epidemiology and Clinical Research, University of New South Wales,
Sydney, Australia, was to establish the prevalence, severity and
factors associated with the HIV lipodystrophy syndrome.
This
cross-sectional study of lipodystrophy
was undertaken in high HIV caseload primary care sites and HIV outpatient
clinics. A subset of patients was examined using dual energy X-ray
absorptiometry (DEXA) and single cut abdominal computerized tomography
(CT) at the L4 vertebral level to quantify regional and total body
fat.
Factors
associated with lipodystrophy, lipoatrophy and lipohypertrophy were
assessed using multiple logistic regression based on assignment
of cases and non-cases.
Study Results
One
thousand three hundred and forty-eight patients (95% male) were
surveyed. 20% had AIDS, the mean CD4 lymphocyte count was 486 cells/microL,
and 55% had <500 HIV-1 RNA copies/mL. Most participants (87%)
had previously received or were currently receiving combination
antiretroviral therapy, 73% with at least one protease inhibitor
(PI) and 14% a non-PI-containing regimen.
Lipodystrophy
prevalence was 53% and of these, 55% reported both peripheral lipoatrophy
and central lipohypertrophy, 31% experienced peripheral lipoatrophy
only and 14% had central lipohypertrophy only. The prevalence of
any body habitus change was 62% in PI-experienced patients, 33%
in PI-naive patients and 21% in antiretroviral-naive patients.
Lipodystrophy
severity was less in antiretroviral-naive patients and most severe
in PI-experienced patients. Increasing severity of lipodystrophy
was both positively and significantly correlated with elevated liver
enzymes, decreased testosterone levels, decreased skin-fold thickness,
lower levels of total and peripheral fat (DEXA) and higher levels
of visceral fat (CT).
Lipodystrophy
was also significantly associated with increasing age, symptomatic
HIV disease, effective viral suppression, and increasing duration
of therapy with both nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
and PIs.
The
authors conclude, “The prevalence and severity of lipodystrophy
reflects both length and type of treatment with antiretroviral therapy
and is associated with decreased testosterone, increases in liver
enzymes and greater suppression of HIV RNA.
“The
reports of lipodystrophy in a small percentage of antiretroviral-naive
patients suggests that factors other than antiretroviral therapy
may be involved in the etiology of this syndrome or that some conditions,
such as wasting or age-associated obesity, may mimic lipoatrophy
and lipohypertrophy, respectively.
10/08/03
Reference
J
Miller and others.
HIV lipodystrophy: prevalence, severity and correlates of risk in
Australia. HIV Medicine 4(3): 293-301. July 2003.
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