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Associations between drug and alcohol use, smoking, and frailty among people with HIV across the United States in the current era of antiretroviral treatment

Authors :
Heidi M. Crane
Stephanie A Ruderman
Bridget M Whitney
Robin M Nance
Lydia N. Drumright
Allison R. Webel
Amanda L. Willig
Michael S. Saag
Katerina Christopoulos
Meredith Greene
Andrew W. Hahn
Joseph J. Eron
Sonia Napravnik
William Christopher Mathews
Geetanjali Chander
Mary E. McCaul
Edward R. Cachay
Kenneth H. Mayer
Alan Landay
Steven Austad
Jimmy Ma
Stephen B. Kritchevsky
Chintan Pandya
Chad Achenbach
Francisco Cartujano-Barrera
Mari Kitahata
Joseph AC Delaney
Charles Kamen
Source :
Drug and alcohol dependence. 240
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To examine associations between frailty and drug, alcohol, and tobacco use among a large diverse cohort of people with HIV (PWH) in clinical care in the current era.PWH at 7 sites across the United States completed clinical assessments of patient-reported measures and outcomes between 2016 and 2019 as part of routine care including drug and alcohol use, smoking, and other domains. Frailty was assessed using 4 of the 5 components of the Fried frailty phenotype and PWH were categorized as not frail, pre-frail, or frail. Associations of substance use with frailty were assessed with multivariate Poisson regression.Among 9336 PWH, 43% were not frail, 44% were prefrail, and 13% were frail. Frailty was more prevalent among women, older PWH, and those reporting current use of drugs or cigarettes. Current methamphetamine use (1.26: 95% CI 1.07-1.48), current (1.65: 95% CI 1.39-1.97) and former (1.21:95% CI 1.06-1.36) illicit opioid use, and former cocaine/crack use (1.17: 95% CI 1.01-1.35) were associated with greater risk of being frail in adjusted analyses. Current smoking was associated with a 61% higher risk of being frail vs. not frail (1.61: 95% CI 1.41-1.85) in adjusted analyses.We found a high prevalence of prefrailty and frailty among a nationally distributed cohort of PWH in care. This study identified distinct risk factors that may be associated with frailty among PWH, many of which, such as cigarette smoking and drug use, are potentially modifiable.

Details

ISSN :
18790046
Volume :
240
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug and alcohol dependence
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a6221a670ca85de2490f95db759cf7e7