Department of Internal Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Center for Biostatistics in AIDS Research, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2023 Jun;39(6):302-309. doi: 10.1089/AID.2022.0129. Epub 2023 Mar 17.
Older persons with HIV (PWH) experience high rates of cognitive impairment and frailty, and accelerated decline in physical function compared with the general population. Metformin use has been associated with beneficial effects on cognitive and physical function among older adults without HIV. The relationship between metformin use on these outcomes in PWH has not been evaluated. AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) A5322 is an observational cohort study of older PWH with annual assessments for cognition and frailty, including measures of physical function (e.g., gait speed and grip strength). Participants with diabetes who were prescribed antihyperglycemic medications were included in this analysis to evaluate the association between metformin and functional outcomes. Cross-sectional, longitudinal, and time-to-event models were used to evaluate the relationship between metformin exposure with cognitive, physical function, and frailty outcomes. Ninety-eight PWH met inclusion criteria and were included in at least one model. No significant associations between metformin use, frailty, physical, or cognitive function were noted in unadjusted or adjusted cross-sectional, longitudinal, or time-to-event models ( > .1 for all models). This study is the first to examine the association between metformin use on functional outcomes among older PWH. Although it did not ascertain significant associations between metformin use and functional outcomes, our small sample size, restriction to persons with diabetes, and lack of randomization to metformin therapy were limitations. Larger randomized studies are needed to determine whether metformin use has beneficial effects on cognitive or physical function in PWH. Clinical Trial Registration numbers: 02570672, 04221750, 00620191, and 03733132.
老年艾滋病毒感染者(PWH)的认知障碍和虚弱发生率较高,与普通人群相比,身体功能下降速度也更快。在没有艾滋病毒的老年人群中,二甲双胍的使用与认知和身体功能的有益影响有关。尚未评估 PWH 中二甲双胍对这些结果的使用关系。艾滋病临床试验组(ACTG)A5322 是一项针对老年 PWH 的观察性队列研究,每年评估认知和虚弱情况,包括身体功能评估(例如,步态速度和握力)。在此分析中,包括患有糖尿病并开处方抗高血糖药物的患者,以评估二甲双胍与功能结果之间的关系。使用横断面、纵向和时间事件模型来评估二甲双胍暴露与认知、身体功能和虚弱结果之间的关系。98 名符合纳入标准的 PWH 至少参加了一个模型。在未调整和调整的横断面、纵向或时间事件模型中,均未发现二甲双胍使用与虚弱、身体或认知功能之间存在显著关联(所有模型均> .1)。这是第一项研究,研究了二甲双胍使用与老年 PWH 功能结果之间的关系。尽管未确定二甲双胍使用与功能结果之间存在显著关联,但我们的样本量小、限制在糖尿病患者、以及缺乏二甲双胍治疗的随机分组是研究的局限性。需要更大规模的随机研究来确定二甲双胍的使用是否对 PWH 的认知或身体功能有有益影响。临床试验注册号:02570672、04221750、00620191 和 03733132。