Abrams Elaine J, Mellins Claude A, Bucek Amelia, Dolezal Curtis, Raymond Jeannette, Wiznia Andrew, Jurgrau Andrea, Bamji Mahrukh, Leu Cheng-Shiun, Ng Yiu Kee Warren
ICAP at Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health,
Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, and.
Pediatrics. 2018 Sep;142(3). doi: 10.1542/peds.2018-0938. Epub 2018 Aug 10.
Young adults living with perinatally acquired HIV infection (PHIVYAs) are at risk for poor biomedical and behavioral health outcomes. Few studies offer a comprehensive overview of the functioning of this population in young adulthood and the role of HIV.
Data come from the Child and Adolescent Self-Awareness and Health Study, a longitudinal behavioral health cohort study of PHIVYAs and perinatally HIV-exposed but uninfected young adults (PHEUYAs) who are compared on psychiatric and neurocognitive functioning, sexual and substance use behaviors, health and reproductive outcomes, and young adult milestones.
Overall, 27% of participants met criteria for a psychiatric disorder, including mood (11%), anxiety (22%), and substance use (28%), with no HIV status differences. PHIVYAs performed worse on 2 neurocognitive tests. There were no HIV status differences in condomless sex (41%) or pregnancies (41% women; 38% men). Both groups exhibited similar adult milestones: 67% graduated high school or an equivalent, 19% were in college, and 42% were employed. However, 38% were neither in school or working, 12% reported incarceration, and 16% were ever homeless. Among PHIVYAs, 36% were viremic (>200 copies per mL), and 15% were severely immunocompromised (CD4 cell count <100 cells per mm).
Many PHIVYAs achieve adult milestones related to school, employment, sexual relationships, and starting families. However, they and PHEUYAs have high rates of psychiatric and substance use disorders and behavioral risks, which can jeopardize long-term health and adult functioning, particularly in the context of HIV. These findings underscore an urgent need to escalate interventions.
感染围产期获得性艾滋病毒的年轻成年人(PHIVYAs)面临生物医学和行为健康状况不佳的风险。很少有研究全面概述这一人群在青年期的功能以及艾滋病毒的作用。
数据来自儿童和青少年自我认知与健康研究,这是一项对PHIVYAs和围产期暴露于艾滋病毒但未感染的年轻成年人(PHEUYAs)进行的纵向行为健康队列研究,对他们的精神和神经认知功能、性和物质使用行为、健康和生殖结果以及青年期里程碑进行了比较。
总体而言,27%的参与者符合精神疾病标准,包括情绪障碍(11%)、焦虑症(22%)和物质使用障碍(28%),艾滋病毒感染状况之间无差异。PHIVYAs在两项神经认知测试中的表现较差。在无保护性行为(41%)或怀孕方面(女性41%;男性38%),艾滋病毒感染状况之间无差异。两组在成年里程碑方面表现相似:67%的人高中毕业或同等学历,19%的人在读大学,42%的人就业。然而,38%的人既未上学也未工作,12%的人报告曾被监禁,16%的人曾无家可归。在PHIVYAs中,36%的人病毒血症(每毫升>200拷贝),15%的人免疫严重受损(CD4细胞计数<每立方毫米100个细胞)。
许多PHIVYAs实现了与上学、就业、性关系和组建家庭相关的成年里程碑。然而,他们和PHEUYAs患有精神疾病和物质使用障碍以及行为风险的比例很高,这可能会危及长期健康和成年后的功能,尤其是在感染艾滋病毒的情况下。这些发现强调迫切需要加强干预措施。