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HIV Infection Is Associated With Variability in Ventricular Repolarization: The Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS).

Authors :
Heravi, Amir S
Heravi, Amir S
Etzkorn, Lacey H
Urbanek, Jacek K
Crainiceanu, Ciprian M
Punjabi, Naresh M
Ashikaga, Hiroshi
Brown, Todd T
Budoff, Matthew J
D'Souza, Gypsyamber
Magnani, Jared W
Palella, Frank J
Berger, Ronald D
Wu, Katherine C
Post, Wendy S
Heravi, Amir S
Heravi, Amir S
Etzkorn, Lacey H
Urbanek, Jacek K
Crainiceanu, Ciprian M
Punjabi, Naresh M
Ashikaga, Hiroshi
Brown, Todd T
Budoff, Matthew J
D'Souza, Gypsyamber
Magnani, Jared W
Palella, Frank J
Berger, Ronald D
Wu, Katherine C
Post, Wendy S
Source :
Circulation; vol 141, iss 3, 176-187; 0009-7322
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

BackgroundPeople living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV+) have greater risk for sudden arrhythmic death than HIV-uninfected (HIV-) individuals. HIV-associated abnormal cardiac repolarization may contribute to this risk. We investigated whether HIV serostatus is associated with ventricular repolarization lability by using the QT variability index (QTVI), defined as a log measure of QT-interval variance indexed to heart rate variance.MethodsWe studied 1123 men (589 HIV+ and 534 HIV-) from MACS (Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study), using the ZioXT ambulatory electrocardiography patch. Beat-to-beat analysis of up to 4 full days of electrocardiographic data per participant was performed using an automated algorithm (median analyzed duration [quartile 1-quartile 3]: 78.3 [66.3-83.0] hours/person). QTVI was modeled using linear mixed-effects models adjusted for demographics, cardiac risk factors, and HIV-related and inflammatory biomarkers.ResultsMean (SD) age was 60.1 (11.9) years among HIV- and 54.2 (11.2) years among HIV+ participants (P<0.001), 83% of whom had undetectable (<20 copies/mL) HIV-1 viral load (VL). In comparison with HIV- men, HIV+ men had higher QTVI (adjusted difference of +0.077 [95% CI, +0.032 to +0.123]). The magnitude of this association depended on the degree of viremia, such that in HIV+ men with undetectable VL, adjusted QTVI was +0.064 (95% CI, +0.017 to +0.111) higher than in HIV- men, whereas, in HIV+ men with detectable VL, adjusted QTVI was higher by +0.150 (95% CI, 0.072-0.228) than in HIV- referents. Analysis of QTVI subcomponents showed that HIV+ men had: (1) lower heart rate variability irrespective of VL status, and (2) higher QT variability if they had detectable, but not with undetectable, VL, in comparison with HIV- men. Higher levels of C-reactive protein, interleukin-6, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor 2, and soluble cluster of differentiation-163 (borderline), were associated with hi

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Circulation; vol 141, iss 3, 176-187; 0009-7322
Notes :
application/pdf, Circulation vol 141, iss 3, 176-187 0009-7322
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391602849
Document Type :
Electronic Resource