Department of Physiological Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.
Department of Pediatrics, and Child Health, University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.
J Neurovirol. 2023 Feb;29(1):45-52. doi: 10.1007/s13365-022-01110-2. Epub 2023 Feb 2.
Despite the fact that many coinfections in people with HIV (PWH) are treatable or suppressible, they may still impact neurocognitive (NC) functioning. Here, we aim to evaluate the presence of latent/treated coinfections and their association with NC functioning in a cohort of PWH in Zambia. We carried out a cross-sectional, nested study involving 151 PWH with viral suppression, and a normative sample of 324 adults without HIV. Plasma samples from PWH who underwent a comprehensive NC assessment were evaluated for the presence of treated/latent coinfections that are common in Zambia. Information about treated pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) was obtained from participants' clinical charts. Overall, PWH differed significantly from the HIV seronegatives on all neuropsychological domains except for fine motor control. ANOVA comparisons of all 3 HIV + groups' demographically corrected mean NC T-scores showed that the HIV + /TB + group had the poorest NC functioning in the following domains: executive functioning (F = 4.23, p = 0.02), working memory (F = 5.05, p = 0.002), verbal fluency (F = 4.24, p = 0.006), learning (F = 11.26, p < 0.001), delayed recall (F = 4.56, p = 0.01), and speed of information processing (F = 5.16, p = 0.005); this group also was substantially worse on the total battery (global mean T-scores; F = 8.02, p < 0.001). In conclusion, treated TB coinfection in PWH was associated with worse NC performance compared to both those with antibodies against other coinfections and without. PWH with antibodies for other coinfections (HIV + /CI +) showed somewhat better NC performance compared to those without (HIV + /CI -), which was not expected, although comparisons with the HIV + /CI + group are limited by its lack of specificity regarding type of coinfection being represented.
尽管许多 HIV 感染者(PWH)中的合并感染是可治疗或可抑制的,但它们仍可能影响神经认知(NC)功能。在这里,我们旨在评估赞比亚队列中 PWH 中潜伏/治疗性合并感染的存在及其与 NC 功能的关系。我们进行了一项横断面、嵌套研究,涉及 151 名病毒抑制的 PWH 和 324 名无 HIV 的正常成年人。对接受全面 NC 评估的 PWH 的血浆样本进行了评估,以确定在赞比亚常见的治疗/潜伏合并感染的存在。从参与者的临床图表中获得了有关治疗性肺结核(TB)的信息。总体而言,PWH 在除精细运动控制外的所有神经心理学领域与 HIV 血清阴性者存在显著差异。所有 3 个 HIV+组的人口统计学校正后 NC T 评分的 ANOVA 比较表明,HIV+/TB+组在以下领域的 NC 功能最差:执行功能(F=4.23,p=0.02)、工作记忆(F=5.05,p=0.002)、语言流畅性(F=4.24,p=0.006)、学习(F=11.26,p<0.001)、延迟回忆(F=4.56,p=0.01)和信息处理速度(F=5.16,p=0.005);该组在总电池(总体平均 T 评分;F=8.02,p<0.001)上也明显更差。总之,与其他合并感染抗体和无抗体的 PWH 相比,PWH 中治疗性 TB 合并感染与更差的 NC 表现相关。与无合并感染抗体的 PWH(HIV+/CI-)相比,具有其他合并感染抗体的 PWH(HIV+/CI+)的 NC 表现稍好,尽管与 HIV+/CI+组的比较受到限制,因为它对所代表的合并感染类型缺乏特异性。