Koethe John R, Bian Aihua, Shintani Ayumi K, Boger M Sean, Mitchell Valerie J, Erdem Husamettin, Hulgan Todd
Division of Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2582, USA.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2012 Jun;28(6):552-7. doi: 10.1089/aid.2011.0232. Epub 2012 Feb 2.
Higher body mass index (BMI) is associated with increased serum C-reactive protein (CRP) levels in HIV-infected individuals on antiretroviral therapy (ART), but the relationship of adipose tissue mass to systemic inflammation is not well described in this population. We hypothesized that serum adipokine levels (i.e., hormones produced by adipocytes) are a superior predictor of CRP compared to anthropometric or radiographic measures of body composition in patients on effective, stable ART. We evaluated the relationship of serum leptin, adiponectin, and resistin, BMI, and dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) measurements with serum highly sensitive CRP (hsCRP) in a cross-sectional cohort of 106 predominantly virologically suppressed, HIV-infected adults on ART for ≥24 weeks using multivariable linear regression and formal criteria to assess statistical mediation. Median BMI, hsCRP, and leptin values were 25.2 kg/m(2), 3.0 mg/liter, and 3.8 ng/ml, respectively. BMI and DEXA limb fat, body fat, and trunk fat measurements were significantly associated with both serum leptin and hsCRP levels (all p≤0.02). Leptin was also associated with hsCRP (p<0.01). The regression coefficient for the effect of BMI or DEXA measurements on hsCRP was reduced, and the relationship was no longer statistically significant, after adjusting for leptin, indicating leptin functioned as a mediating variable within these relationships. Adiponectin and resistin levels did not demonstrate similar effects. Serum leptin was a superior predictor of hsCRP compared to BMI and DEXA body fat measurements, which may reflect alterations in body composition in treated HIV infection and the important contribution of adipose tissue to inflammation in this population.
在接受抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的HIV感染者中,较高的体重指数(BMI)与血清C反应蛋白(CRP)水平升高有关,但在该人群中,脂肪组织量与全身炎症的关系尚未得到充分描述。我们假设,对于接受有效、稳定ART治疗的患者,与人体测量或身体成分的影像学测量相比,血清脂肪因子水平(即脂肪细胞产生的激素)是CRP的更好预测指标。我们在一个横断面队列中评估了106名主要病毒学抑制的HIV感染成人在接受ART治疗≥24周时血清瘦素、脂联素和抵抗素、BMI以及双能X线吸收法(DEXA)测量值与血清高敏CRP(hsCRP)之间的关系,使用多变量线性回归和正式标准来评估统计中介作用。BMI、hsCRP和瘦素的中位数分别为25.2 kg/m²、3.0 mg/升和3.8 ng/ml。BMI以及DEXA测量的四肢脂肪、身体脂肪和躯干脂肪与血清瘦素和hsCRP水平均显著相关(所有p≤0.02)。瘦素也与hsCRP相关(p<0.01)。在调整瘦素后,BMI或DEXA测量对hsCRP的影响的回归系数降低,且该关系不再具有统计学意义,表明瘦素在这些关系中起中介变量的作用。脂联素和抵抗素水平未显示出类似的作用。与BMI和DEXA身体脂肪测量相比,血清瘦素是hsCRP的更好预测指标,这可能反映了接受治疗的HIV感染患者身体成分的改变以及脂肪组织对该人群炎症的重要贡献。