Document detail
ID

doi:10.1007/s40615-023-01627-0...

Author
Bloomfield, Gerald S. Hill, C. Larry Chiswell, Karen Cooper, Linda Gray, Shamea Longenecker, Chris T. Louzao, Darcy Marsolo, Keith Meissner, Eric G. Morse, Caryn G. Muiruri, Charles Thomas, Kevin L. Velazquez, Eric J. Vicini, Joseph Pettit, April C. Sanders, Gretchen Okeke, Nwora Lance
Langue
en
Editor

Springer

Category

Epidemiology

Year

2023

listing date

5/10/2023

Keywords
hiv cardiovascular disease underrepresented racial and ethnic... referral and consultation risk factors cardiovascular risk
Metrics

Abstract

Background Underrepresented racial and ethnic groups (UREGs) with HIV have a higher risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared with the general population.

Referral to a cardiovascular specialist improves CVD risk factor management in high-risk individuals.

However, patient and provider factors impacting the likelihood of UREGs with HIV to have an encounter with a cardiologist are unknown.

Methods We evaluated a cohort of UREGs with HIV and borderline CVD risk (10-year risk ≥ 5% by the pooled cohort equations or ≥ 7.5% by Framingham risk score).

Participants received HIV-related care from 2014–2020 at four academic medical centers in the United States (U.S.).

Adjusted Cox proportional hazards regression was used to estimate the association of patient and provider characteristics with time to first ambulatory cardiology encounter.

Results A total of 2,039 people with HIV (PWH) and borderline CVD risk were identified.

The median age was 45 years (IQR: 36–50); 52% were female; and 94% were Black.

Of these participants, 283 (14%) had an ambulatory visit with a cardiologist (17% of women vs. 11% of men, p < .001).

In fully adjusted models, older age, higher body mass index (BMI), atrial fibrillation, multimorbidity, urban residence, and no recent insurance were associated with a greater likelihood of an encounter with a cardiologist.

Conclusion In UREGs with HIV and borderline CVD risk, the strongest determinants of a cardiology encounter were diagnosed CVD, insurance type, and urban residence.

Future research is needed to determine the extent to which these encounters impact CVD care practices and outcomes in this population.

Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04025125.

Bloomfield, Gerald S.,Hill, C. Larry,Chiswell, Karen,Cooper, Linda,Gray, Shamea,Longenecker, Chris T.,Louzao, Darcy,Marsolo, Keith,Meissner, Eric G.,Morse, Caryn G.,Muiruri, Charles,Thomas, Kevin L.,Velazquez, Eric J.,Vicini, Joseph,Pettit, April C.,Sanders, Gretchen,Okeke, Nwora Lance, 2023, Cardiology Encounters for Underrepresented Racial and Ethnic Groups with Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Borderline Cardiovascular Disease Risk, Springer

Document

Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

Performance Validity Testing on the NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery: Base Rates of Failed Embedded Validity Indicators in the Adult Normative Sample
crystallized data false-positive failure tests scores age-adjusted validity standard using evi failures multivariable nihtb-cb cognition rates sd