Kelesidis Theodoros, Oda Michael N, Borja Mark S, Yee Yumin, Ng Kit F, Huynh Diana, Elashoff David, Currier Judith S
*Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles, CA; †Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute, Oakland, CA; and ‡Department of Medicine Statistics Core, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2017 Jul 1;75(3):354-363. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000001383.
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) function rather than absolute level may be a more accurate indicator for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Novel methods can measure HDL function using patient samples. The objective of this study is to identify factors that may contribute to HDL dysfunction in chronic treated HIV-1 infection.
Retrospective study of HDL function measured in 2 ways in HIV-1-infected men with low overall CVD risk and healthy men with no known CVD risk matched by race to the HIV-1-infected participants.
We examined patient-level factors associated with 2 different measures of HDL dysfunction: reduced antioxidant function (oxidized HDL, HDLox) and reduced HDL-apoA-I exchange (HAE), a measure of HDL remodeling, in the HIV infected and control men. Multivariable-adjusted linear regression analyses were used adjusting for false discovery rate, age, race, body mass index (BMI), CD4 count, viremia, CVD risk, smoking, lipids, apoA-I, and albumin.
In multivariate analysis among HIV-1-infected men (n = 166) (median age 45 years, CD4 T-cell count 505 cells/mm, 30.1% were viremic), higher BMI, lower apoA-I, and lower albumin were among the most notable correlates of higher HDLox and lower HAE (P < 0.05). In HIV-1 uninfected participants, lower albumin and higher BMI were associated with lower HAE and higher HDLox, respectively (P ≤ 0.05). HDLox was inversely related to HAE in HIV-1-infected individuals (P < 0.001).
Increased HDLox correlates with reduced HAE in chronic HIV-1 infection. Higher BMI, lower apoA-I, and albumin were identified as factors associated with HDL dysfunction in chronic HIV-1 infection using 2 independent methods.
高密度脂蛋白(HDL)的功能而非绝对水平可能是心血管疾病(CVD)更准确的指标。新方法可利用患者样本测量HDL功能。本研究的目的是确定可能导致慢性治疗的HIV-1感染中HDL功能障碍的因素。
对总体CVD风险较低的HIV-1感染男性和与HIV-1感染参与者种族匹配且无已知CVD风险的健康男性,采用两种方法测量HDL功能的回顾性研究。
我们检查了与HDL功能障碍的两种不同测量指标相关的患者水平因素:抗氧化功能降低(氧化HDL,HDLox)和HDL-载脂蛋白A-I交换减少(HAE),后者是HDL重塑的一种测量指标,在HIV感染男性和对照男性中进行了研究。使用多变量调整线性回归分析,并对错误发现率、年龄、种族、体重指数(BMI)、CD4计数、病毒血症、CVD风险、吸烟、血脂、载脂蛋白A-I和白蛋白进行了调整。
在HIV-1感染男性(n = 166)(中位年龄45岁,CD4 T细胞计数505个细胞/mm,30.1%有病毒血症)的多变量分析中,较高的BMI、较低的载脂蛋白A-I和较低的白蛋白是HDLox升高和HAE降低最显著的相关因素(P < 0.05)。在未感染HIV-1的参与者中,较低的白蛋白和较高的BMI分别与较低的HAE和较高的HDLox相关(P≤0.05)。在HIV-1感染个体中,HDLox与HAE呈负相关(P < 0.001)。
在慢性HIV-1感染中,HDLox升高与HAE降低相关。使用两种独立方法确定较高的BMI、较低的载脂蛋白A-I和白蛋白是与慢性HIV-1感染中HDL功能障碍相关的因素。