Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America.
Department of Psychiatry, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Oct 1;16(10):e0258032. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0258032. eCollection 2021.
Functional support-the availability of material aid, emotional support, or companionship-promotes general well-being. For men who have sex with men (MSM) living with HIV, having a person who supports you associates with viral suppression. This study examines the association between supportive partnerships and HIV viral suppression among middle-aged and aging MSM living with HIV. A total of 423 middle-aged and aging MSM (mean age, 58.2 years) from the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study provided self-reported data about their partnerships. Separate Poisson regression models assessed how partnership type, support, strain, and duration from April 2017 were associated with repeated viral load measurements up to April 2019. Of the follow-up visits (N = 1289), 90.0% of participants were virally suppressed. Most participants reported being non-Hispanic White (61.0%) and college-educated (83.4%). Participants were asked about their primary partnerships (i.e., "someone they are committed to above anyone else") and secondary partnerships (i.e., those who can also be intimate or supportive but not necessarily romantic or sexual). The participants reported: no partnerships (45.2%), only primary partnerships (31.0%), only secondary partnerships (11.1%), or both primary and secondary partnerships (12.8%). Primary and secondary partnerships had mean (SD) durations of 15.9 (11.3) and 25.2 (16.5) years, respectively. Participants reporting both primary and secondary partnerships (compared with no partnership) showed significantly higher odds of being virally suppressed (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR], 1.04; 95% CI, 1.00-1.08; p = 0.043). Albeit not statistically significant, primary-only (aPR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.97-1.06; p = 0.547) or secondary-only (aPR, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.98-1.08; p = 0.224) partnership types were positively associated with viral suppression. Partner support and strain were not associated with viral suppression in any partnership group. Being older and non-Hispanic Black were positively and negatively associated with viral suppression, respectively. Encouraging partnerships should be considered one of clinicians' many tools to help middle-aged and aging MSM achieve long-term viral suppression.
功能支持——物质援助、情感支持或陪伴的提供——促进整体幸福感。对于感染艾滋病毒的男男性行为者(MSM)来说,拥有一个支持你的人有助于病毒抑制。本研究探讨了在感染艾滋病毒的中老年 MSM 中,支持性伴侣关系与 HIV 病毒抑制之间的关联。来自多中心艾滋病队列研究的 423 名中老年 MSM(平均年龄 58.2 岁)提供了关于他们伴侣关系的自我报告数据。单独的泊松回归模型评估了从 2017 年 4 月开始的伴侣关系类型、支持、紧张程度和持续时间如何与 2019 年 4 月之前的重复病毒载量测量结果相关。在随访(N = 1289)中,90.0%的参与者病毒得到抑制。大多数参与者报告为非西班牙裔白人(61.0%)和大学学历(83.4%)。参与者被问及他们的主要伴侣关系(即“他们比任何人都更投入的人”)和次要伴侣关系(即那些也可以亲密或支持但不一定浪漫或性关系的人)。参与者报告:没有伴侣关系(45.2%)、只有主要伴侣关系(31.0%)、只有次要伴侣关系(11.1%)或主要和次要伴侣关系都有(12.8%)。主要和次要伴侣关系的平均(SD)持续时间分别为 15.9(11.3)和 25.2(16.5)年。与没有伴侣关系相比,报告有主要和次要伴侣关系的参与者(调整后患病率比 [aPR],1.04;95%CI,1.00-1.08;p = 0.043),病毒抑制的可能性显著更高。虽然没有统计学意义,但仅主要(aPR,1.01;95%CI,0.97-1.06;p = 0.547)或仅次要(aPR,1.03;95%CI,0.98-1.08;p = 0.224)伴侣关系类型与病毒抑制呈正相关。在任何伴侣关系群体中,伴侣支持和紧张都与病毒抑制无关。年龄较大和非西班牙裔黑人与病毒抑制呈正相关和负相关。鼓励建立伴侣关系应该被视为临床医生的众多工具之一,以帮助中老年 MSM 实现长期病毒抑制。