Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCleopatra Richardson Modified over 9 years ago
1
World AIDS Conference 2014 Impact of short-term change in body mass index after antiretroviral therapy initiation on subsequent risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes in HIV-positive individuals: the D:A:D study A.C. Achhra, A. Mocroft, P. Reiss, C. Sabin, L. Ryom, S. de Wit, C. Smith, A. d'Arminio Monforte, A. Phillips, R. Weber, J. Lundgren, M.G. Law, The D:A:D Study Group
2
Background Excess weight is a growing concern in HIV-positive individuals on ART ART initiation is often associated with weight gain Thought to be a good prognostic indicator Impact on cardiovascular health? VA cohort: per 5lb. gain on ART initiation ~10% more risk of incident diabetes Better understanding this relationship could help manage risk of serious events in HIV-positive individuals 1917 U Alabama cohort Tate 2012; Hasse 2014; Herrin (CROI 2013)
3
Objective To assess the relationship between short-term change in BMI after first ART initiation and the subsequent risk of: cardiovascular disease (CVD) diabetes mellitus (DM)
4
Methods (1) Enter D:A:D cohort: N=49717 ART naive, starting ART: N=14108 1 Year post ART BMI available N=9438 No CVD before this time: N=9321 CVD event or censored (Feb 2013) Final N=9321 Analysis time Inclusion criteria and analysis time: Exposure of interest: Absolute change in BMI (kg/m 2 ) at 1 year post ART initiation
5
Methods (2): Endpoints CVD Cardiovascular disease (CVD): composite of myocardial infarction (MI), sudden cardiac death, or invasive procedure (coronary artery bypass graft, carotid endarterectomy, or angioplasty) or confirmed stroke Validated in real time by a defined protocol DM DM verified in a DAD event form or by the use of anti- diabetic drugs, more details at www.chip.dk
6
Statistical Methods BMI change as a continuous variable Exploratory analysis of change in BMI Incidence rate ratios (IRR) were determined using Poisson regression adjusted for relevant risk factors: Adjusted for key risk factors identified in previous D:A:D analyses for each of the outcome; also CD4 and BMI at ART start and cohort Models sequentially adjusted for key variables at different time points. Assessed if pre-ART BMI (categorised) is an effect modifier for each of the outcomes Provide category specific IRRs ( per unit change in BMI) Friis-Møller 2010; Petoumenos 2012
7
BMI change post ART initiation Overall mean change at 1 year: 0.67
8
Patient characteristics at ART initiation
9
Overall, 97 CVD events in 43982 person-years= 2.21 events/1000 person-years (95% CI: 1.76-2.68) 46 MIs, 33 strokes, 18 invasive procedures The rates (/1000 person-years) (95% CI) by pre-ART BMI: CVD Underweight (<18.5):1.73 (0.56-4.03) Normal (18.5-25):2.13 (1.63-2.73) Over-weight (25-30):2.41 (1.55-3.59) Obese (>30):2.78 (1.12-5.74)
10
Adjusted IRR for CVD per unit gain in BMI Pre-ART BMI P for effect modification in adjusted models: 0.041. Underweight <18.5 Normal 18.5-25 Over-weight 25-30 Obese >30
11
Adjusted IRR for CVD per unit gain in BMI Pre-ART BMI Quartiles P for effect modification in adjusted models: 0.011 Q2 20.9-23.0 Q3 23.0-25.5 Q4 >25 Adjusted for demographics All time-updated variables
12
Similar inclusion criteria Those with DM before study entry excluded 125 DM events in 9193 eligible individuals (43278 person-years), at the rate of 2.89/1000 person-years The rates (/1000 person-years) by pre-ART BMI : Diabetes mellitus Underweight:2.04 (0.76-4.53) Normal:2.01 (1.51-2.59) Over-weight:4.05 (2.88-5.54) Obese:9.97 (6.32-14.96)
13
Adjusted IRR for DM per unit gain in BMI All patients*Underweight <18.5 Normal 18.5-25 Overweight 25-30 Obese >30 Pre-ART BMI *P for effect modification in adjusted models:> 0.05. Adjusted for demographics All time-updated variables
14
Sensitivity analyses Results robust to following sensitivity analyses: exclude IDU (resulted in smaller P value for CVD outcome) restrict to those with viral load <400 copies/mL at 1 year model % change in BMI
15
Strengths and Limitations Heterogeneous cohort with real-time outcome ascertainment Many key potential confounders available Modern cohort on contemporary regimens Selected sample BMI may not accurately reflect central obesity; waist- hip ratio unavailable Life-style factors (e.g. diet/exercise) unavailable Limited number of specific CVD events
16
Conclusion Short-term gain in BMI post ART initiation could be associated with the increased risk of CVD, largely in those with normal/mid- levels of pre-ART BMI Need to be verified in different studies Gain in BMI also associated with risk of diabetes in all groups No appreciable change in risk of CVD with gain in BMI in those with high pre-ART BMI Low power? Bias? Limitation of BMI? Regression to mean? Interpret cautiously Further research needed regarding weight management in this population
17
Acknowledgements Steering Committee: Members indicated w/ *; ¢ chair; Cohort PIs: W El-Sadr* (CPCRA), G Calvo* (BASS), F Dabis* (Aquitaine), O Kirk* (EuroSIDA), M Law* (AHOD), A d’Arminio Monforte* (ICONA), L Morfeldt* (HivBIVUS), C Pradier* (Nice), P Reiss* (ATHENA), R Weber* (SHCS), S De Wit* (Brussels) Cohort coordinators and data managers: M Hillebreght, S Zaheri, L Gras, (ATHENA), M Bruyand, S Geffard, (Aquitaine), H McManus, S Wright (AHOD), S Mateu, F Torres (BASS), M Delforge (Brussels), G Bartsch, G Thompsen (CPCRA), J Kjær (EuroSIDA), Iuri Fanti (ICONA), E Fontas, C Caissotti (Nice), A Sundström, G Thulin (HivBIVUS), M Rickenbach (SHCS) Statisticians: CA Sabin*, AN Phillips*, DA Kamara, CJ Smith, A Mocroft D:A:D coordinating office: L Ryom, R Brandt, J Tverland, D Raben, A Bojesen, J Nielsen, JD Lundgren*¢ Member of the D:A:D Oversight Committee: B Powderly*, N Shortman*, C Moecklinghoff *, G Reilly*, X Franquet* D:A:D working group experts: Kidney: L Ryom, A Mocroft, O Kirk *, P Reiss *, M Ross, CA Fux, P Morlat, O Moranne, AM Kesselring, DA Kamara, CJ Smith, JD Lundgren *¢ Mortality CJ Smith, L Ryom, AN Phillips *, R Weber*, P Morlat, C Pradier *, P Reiss *, N Friis- Møller, J Kowalska, JD Lundgren*¢ Cancer CA Sabin *, L Ryom, M Law *, A d'Arminio Monforte*, F Dabis*, M Bruyand, P Reiss *, CJ Smith, DA Kamara, M Bower, G Fätkenheuer, A Donald, A Grulich, JD Lundgren*¢ External endpoint reviewer: A Sjøl (CVD), P Meidahl (oncology), JS Iversen (nephrology) Funding: ‘Oversight Committee for The Evaluation of Metabolic Complications of HAART’ with representatives from academia, patient community, FDA, EMA and a consortium of AbbVie, BoehringerIngelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Gilead Sciences, ViiV Healthcare, Merck, Pfizer, F. Hoffmann-La Roche and Janssen Pharmaceuticals
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.