Keywords

antiretroviral, atherosclerosis, coronary artery calcium, HIV, metabolic abnormalities

 

Authors

  1. Robinson, F. Patrick PhD, RN, ACRN
  2. Hoff, Julie Anne PhD, RN
  3. Kondos, George T. MD

Abstract

Calcium is a common component of an atherosclerotic plaque; therefore, the presence of coronary artery calcium (CAC) indicates atherosclerosis. This study investigated the difference in total CAC scores between HIV-infected patients treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) and HIV-negative age-matched controls. HIV patients were 27 men treated with a protease inhibitor-containing HAART regimen for more than 1 year (M = 4.92 years, SD = 2.02), aged 30 to 60 years (M = 43.52 years, SD = 6.65), and not receiving lipid-lowering or hypoglycemic drugs. Controls were age-matched men randomly selected (three controls to one case, for a total of 81 controls) from our existing database of 25,250 men who self-referred for CAC screening (control database). Electron beam tomography was used to obtain CAC scores. The CAC scores were coded as above or below the age-specific (stratified in 5-year increments) 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, or 90th percentile of our control database. Chi-square analyses for two independent samples indicated (1) a larger frequency of controls with CAC scores above the 10th ([chi]2(1) = 8.32, P = .004) and 25th ([chi]2(1) = 5.45, P = .02) percentiles than that of HIV patients, (2) no differences in CAC scores between groups above the 50th ([chi]2 = 0.85, P = .357) or 75th ([chi]2 = 0.46, P = .497) percentile, and (3) a larger frequency of HIV patients who were above the 90th percentile ([chi]2 = 4.5, P = .034). The strength of the relationship between group membership and scoring above the 90th percentile was significant ([script phi] = 0.20, P = .034). These results tentatively suggest that there is an elevated level of subclinical atherosclerosis in HIV patients treated with HAART.