Alford Kate, Banerjee Sube, Nixon Eileen, O'Brien Clara, Pounds Olivia, Butler Andrew, Elphick Claire, Henshaw Phillip, Anderson Stuart, Vera Jaime H
Department of Global Health and Infection, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Brighton, BN1 9PX, UK.
Centre for Dementia Studies, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Brighton, BN1 9PX, UK.
Brain Sci. 2019 Feb 8;9(2):37. doi: 10.3390/brainsci9020037.
As the HIV population ages, the prevalence of cognitive impairment (CI) is increasing, yet few services exist for the assessment and management of these individuals. Here we provide an initial description of a memory assessment service for people living with HIV and present data from a service evaluation undertaken in the clinic. We conducted an evaluation of the first 52 patients seen by the clinic. We present patient demographic data, assessment outcomes, diagnoses given and interventions delivered to those seen in the clinic. 41 patients (79%) of those seen in the clinic had objective CI: 16 (31%) met criteria for HIV-associated Neurocognitive Disorder (HAND), 2 (4%) were diagnosed with dementia, 14 (27%) showed CI associated with mental illness and/or drugs/alcohol, 7 (13%) had CI which was attributed to factors other than HIV and in 2 (4%) patients the cause remains unclear. 32 (62%) patients showed some abnormality on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) brain scans. Patients attending the clinic performed significantly worse than normative scores on all tests of global cognition and executive function. Interventions offered to patients included combination antiretroviral therapy modification, signposting to other services, case management, further health investigations and in-clinic advice. Our experience suggests that the need exists for specialist HIV memory services and that such a model of working can be successfully implemented into HIV patient care. Further work is needed on referral criteria and pathways. Diagnostic processes and treatment offered needs to consider and address the multifactorial aetiology of CI in HIV and this is essential for effective assessment and management.
随着感染艾滋病毒的人群老龄化,认知障碍(CI)的患病率不断上升,但针对这些个体的评估和管理服务却很少。在此,我们初步描述了一项针对艾滋病毒感染者的记忆评估服务,并展示了在该诊所进行的服务评估数据。我们对该诊所接诊的首批52名患者进行了评估。我们呈现了患者的人口统计学数据、评估结果、诊断情况以及针对诊所内患者所采取的干预措施。诊所接诊的患者中有41名(79%)存在客观认知障碍:16名(31%)符合艾滋病毒相关神经认知障碍(HAND)的标准,2名(4%)被诊断为痴呆,14名(27%)表现出与精神疾病和/或药物/酒精相关的认知障碍,7名(13%)的认知障碍归因于艾滋病毒以外的因素,2名(4%)患者的病因仍不清楚。32名(62%)患者的脑部磁共振成像(MRI)扫描显示出一些异常。在所有全球认知和执行功能测试中,到诊所就诊的患者表现明显低于正常分数。为患者提供的干预措施包括调整抗逆转录病毒联合疗法、指引至其他服务机构、病例管理、进一步的健康检查以及诊所内建议。我们的经验表明,需要有专门的艾滋病毒记忆服务,并且这样的工作模式可以成功应用于艾滋病毒患者护理中。在转诊标准和途径方面还需要进一步开展工作。所提供的诊断流程和治疗需要考虑并解决艾滋病毒相关认知障碍的多因素病因,这对于有效评估和管理至关重要。