Department of Neurology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1052, New York, NY, 10029, USA.
Hospital Dr. Sótero del Río, Neurology Service, Complejo Asistencial Dr. Sótero del Rio, Avenida Concha y Toro 3459, Block Central, 3rd Floor, 8207257, Puente Alto, Santiago, Chile.
J Neurovirol. 2018 Aug;24(4):514-522. doi: 10.1007/s13365-018-0640-6. Epub 2018 Apr 25.
HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) remain prevalent in the combined antiretroviral therapy (CART) era, especially the milder forms. Despite these milder phenotypes, we have shown that motor abnormalities persist and have quantified them with the HIV Dementia Motor Scale (HDMS). Our objectives were to replicate, in an independent sample, our prior findings that the HDMS is associated with cognitive impairment in HIV, while adding consideration of age-associated comorbidities such as cerebrovascular disease, and to examine the longitudinal trajectories of cognitive and motor dysfunction. We included all participants enrolled in the Manhattan HIV Brain Bank (MHBB) from January 2007 to May 2017 who had complete baseline data (N = 164). MHBB participants undergo standardized longitudinal assessments including documentation of comorbidities and medications, blood work, the HDMS, and neurocognitive testing. We found that motor dysfunction, cognitive impairment, and cerebrovascular disease were significantly associated with each other at baseline. Cerebrovascular disease independently predicted cognitive impairment in a multivariable model. Longitudinal analysis in a subset of 78 participants with ≥ 4 years of follow-up showed a stable cognition but declining motor function. We conclude that the HDMS is a valid measurement of motor dysfunction in HIV-infected patients and is associated with cognitive impairment and the presence of cerebrovascular disease. Cognitive impairment is mild and stable in CART-treated HIV; however, motor function declines over time, which may be related to the accrual of comorbidities such as cerebrovascular disease. Further research should examine the mechanisms underlying motor dysfunction in HIV and its clinical impact.
HIV 相关的神经认知障碍(HAND)在联合抗逆转录病毒治疗(CART)时代仍然普遍存在,尤其是轻度 HAND。尽管这些轻度表型,我们已经表明运动异常仍然存在,并使用 HIV 痴呆运动量表(HDMS)对其进行了量化。我们的目的是在独立样本中复制我们之前的发现,即 HDMS 与 HIV 认知障碍相关,同时考虑与年龄相关的共病,如脑血管疾病,并检查认知和运动功能障碍的纵向轨迹。我们纳入了 2007 年 1 月至 2017 年 5 月期间在曼哈顿 HIV 脑库(MHBB)登记的所有参与者,这些参与者均有完整的基线数据(N=164)。MHBB 参与者接受标准化的纵向评估,包括共病和药物记录、血液检查、HDMS 和神经认知测试。我们发现,运动功能障碍、认知障碍和脑血管疾病在基线时彼此显著相关。脑血管疾病在多变量模型中独立预测认知障碍。对 78 名有≥4 年随访的参与者的亚组进行的纵向分析显示,认知稳定但运动功能下降。我们得出结论,HDMS 是 HIV 感染患者运动功能障碍的有效测量方法,与认知障碍和脑血管疾病的存在相关。在接受 CART 治疗的 HIV 患者中,认知障碍较轻且稳定;然而,运动功能随时间下降,这可能与共病的累积有关,如脑血管疾病。进一步的研究应该检查 HIV 中运动功能障碍的机制及其临床影响。