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Incidence of dyslipidemia in people with HIV who are treated with integrase inhibitors versus other antiretroviral agents

Authors :
Byonanebye, Dathan M.
Polizzotto, Mark N.
Begovac, Josip
Grabmeier-Pfistershammer, Katharina
Abela, Irene
Castagna, Antonella
De Wit, Stephane
Mussini, Cristina
Vehreschild, Joerg J.
Monforte, Antonella d'A
Wit, Ferdinand W. N. M.
Pradier, Christian
Chkhartishvili, Nikoloz
Sonnerborg, Anders
Hoy, Jennifer
Lundgren, Jens
Neesgaard, Bastian
Bansi-matharu, Loveleen
Greenberg, Lauren
Llibre, Josep M.
Vannappagari, Vani
Gallant, Joel
Necsoi, Coca
Cichon, Piotr
Reiss, Peter
Aho, Inka
Tsertsvadze, Tengiz
Mennozzi, Marianna
Rauch, Andri
Muccini, Camilla
Law, Matthew
Mocroft, Amanda
Ryom, Lene
Petoumenos, Kathy
Byonanebye, Dathan M.
Polizzotto, Mark N.
Begovac, Josip
Grabmeier-Pfistershammer, Katharina
Abela, Irene
Castagna, Antonella
De Wit, Stephane
Mussini, Cristina
Vehreschild, Joerg J.
Monforte, Antonella d'A
Wit, Ferdinand W. N. M.
Pradier, Christian
Chkhartishvili, Nikoloz
Sonnerborg, Anders
Hoy, Jennifer
Lundgren, Jens
Neesgaard, Bastian
Bansi-matharu, Loveleen
Greenberg, Lauren
Llibre, Josep M.
Vannappagari, Vani
Gallant, Joel
Necsoi, Coca
Cichon, Piotr
Reiss, Peter
Aho, Inka
Tsertsvadze, Tengiz
Mennozzi, Marianna
Rauch, Andri
Muccini, Camilla
Law, Matthew
Mocroft, Amanda
Ryom, Lene
Petoumenos, Kathy
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective: To compare the incidence of dyslipidemia in people with HIV receiving integrase inhibitors (INSTI) versus boosted protease inhibitors (PI/b) and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) within RESPOND consortium of prospective cohorts. Methods: Participants were eligible if they were at least 18 years, without dyslipidemia and initiated or switched to a three-drug antiretroviral therapy (ART)-regimen consisting of either INSTI, NNRTI, or PI/b for the first time, between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2018. Dyslipidemia was defined as random total cholesterol more than 240 mg/dl, HDL less than 35 mg/dl, triglyceride more than 200 mg/dl, or initiation of lipid-lowering therapy. Poisson regression was used to determine the adjusted incidence rate ratios. Follow-up was censored after 3 years or upon ART-regimen discontinuation or last lipid measurement or 31 December 2019, whichever occurred first. Results: Overall, 4577 people with HIV were eligible (INSTI = 66.9%, PI/b = 12.5%, and NNRTI = 20.6%), 1938 (42.3%) of whom were ART-naive. During 1.7 (interquartile range, 0.6-3.0) median years of follow-up, 1460 participants developed dyslipidemia [incidence rate: 191.6 per 1000 person-years, 95% confidence interval (CI) 182.0-201.7]. Participants taking INSTI had a lower incidence of dyslipidemia compared with those on PI/b (adjusted incidence rate ratio 0.71; CI 0.59-0.85), but higher rate compared with those on NNRTI (1.35; CI 1.15-1.58). Compared with dolutegravir, the incidence of dyslipidemia was higher with elvitegravir/cobicistat (1.20; CI 1.00-1.43) and raltegravir (1.24; CI 1.02-1.51), but lower with rilpivirine (0.77; CI 0.63-0.94). Conclusion: In this large consortium of heterogeneous cohorts, dyslipidemia was less common with INSTI than with PI/b. Compared with dolutegravir, dyslipidemia was more common with elvitegravir/cobicistat and raltegravir, but less common with rilpivirine.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312208158
Document Type :
Electronic Resource