detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

doi:10.1186/s12981-024-00598-4...

Autor
Williams, Jason L. Hung, Frances Jenista, Elizabeth Barker, Piers Chakraborty, Hrishikesh Kim, Raymond McCrary, Andrew W. Shah, Svati H. Thielman, Nathan Bloomfield, Gerald S.
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Categoría

Medicine & Public Health

Año

2024

fecha de cotización

6/3/2024

Palabras clave
perinatal infection hiv myocardial fibrosis people acquired data infection myocardial controls fibrosis assessed hiv
Métrico

Resumen

Background Cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains a leading cause of death in people living with HIV.

Myocardial fibrosis is well-described in HIV infection acquired in adulthood.

We evaluate the burden of fibrosis by cardiac magnetic resonance in people with perinatal HIV infection.

Methods Individuals with perinatally acquired HIV (pnHIV) diagnosed before 10 years-old and on antiretroviral treatment for ≥ 6 months were matched with uninfected controls.

Patients with significant cardiometabolic co-morbidities and pregnancy were excluded.

Diffuse fibrosis was assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) with native T1 mapping for calculation of extracellular volume fraction (ECV).

Viability was assessed with late gadolinium enhancement.

The normality of fibrosis was assessed using the Komogrov-Smirnov test.

Fibrosis between the groups was analyzed using a Mann-Whitney U test, as the data was not normally distributed.

Statistical significance was defined as a p-valve < 0.05.

Results Fourteen adults with pnHIV group and 26 controls (71% female and 86% Black race) were assessed.

The average (± standard deviation) age in the study group was 29 (± 4.3) years-old.

All pnHIV had been on ART for decades.

Demographic data, CMR functional/volumetric data, and pre-contrast T1 mapping values were similar between groups.

Diastolic function was normal in 50% of pnHIV patients and indeterminate in most of the remainder (42%).

There was no statistically significant difference in ECV between groups; p  = 0.24.

Conclusion Perinatally-acquired HIV was not associated with diffuse myocardial fibrosis.

Larger prospective studies with serial examinations are needed to determine whether pnHIV patients develop abnormal structure or function more often than unaffected controls.

Williams, Jason L.,Hung, Frances,Jenista, Elizabeth,Barker, Piers,Chakraborty, Hrishikesh,Kim, Raymond,McCrary, Andrew W.,Shah, Svati H.,Thielman, Nathan,Bloomfield, Gerald S., 2024, Diffuse myocardial fibrosis is uncommon in people with perinatally acquired human immunodeficiency virus infection, BioMed Central

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