1. Changes in Urinary Biomarkers Over 10 Years Is Associated With Viral Suppression in a Prospective Cohort of Women Living With HIV
- Author
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Baxi, Sanjiv M, Scherzer, Rebecca, Jotwani, Vasantha, Estrella, Michelle M, Abraham, Alison G, Parikh, Chirag R, Bennett, Michael R, Cohen, Mardge H, Nowicki, Marek J, Gustafson, Deborah R, Sharma, Anjali, Young, Mary A, and Shlipak, Michael G
- Subjects
Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Hepatitis ,Women's Health ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Health Disparities ,Hepatitis - C ,Minority Health ,Kidney Disease ,Digestive Diseases ,Liver Disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Albuminuria ,Alpha-Globulins ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Biomarkers ,Creatinine ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Interleukin-18 ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency ,Sustained Virologic Response ,biomarkers ,chronic renal insufficiency ,HIV ,WIHS ,women ,Womenʼs Interagency HIV Study ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundUrine biomarkers have helped identify persons at risk for progressing to kidney disease in the setting of HIV infection. We explored factors associated with changes in 3 urine biomarkers over 10 years among women living with HIV.MethodsProspective cohort of 294 HIV-infected women from the multicenter Women's Interagency HIV Study. Predictors included HIV viral and immunological parameters, comorbid conditions, and health-related behaviors. Outcomes were patterns of changes of urine interleukin-18 (IL-18), albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR), and alpha-1-microglobulin (α1m) over 10 years. We used quantile regression to examine patterns of change in each urine biomarker during follow-up and multivariable analysis of variance regression to identify predictors of biomarker changes.ResultsOver 10 years, the median concentrations of IL-18 declined from 120 to 64 pg/mL, α1m rose from 0.7 to 1.5 ng/mL, and ACR remained stable (9-8 mg/g). In multivariate analyses, the strongest predictors of increases in IL-18 were higher baseline body mass index, increase in waist circumference, higher follow-up HIV viral load, lower follow-up CD4 cell count, hepatitis C virus (HCV) coinfection, and higher follow-up high density lipoprotein cholesterol. Predictors of increasing concentration of α1m were lower CD4 cell counts, higher diastolic blood pressure, HCV coinfection, and smoking. Finally, determinants of ACR increases during follow-up were higher follow-up diastolic blood pressure, HCV coinfection, higher follow-up HIV viral load, and triglyceride concentration.ConclusionsOver 10 years, HIV disease status had different associations with each urine biomarker under study. Overall, the associations with changes in each biomarker support research into their use for longitudinal monitoring of kidney health.
- Published
- 2017