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Sex Differences in Subclinical Atherosclerosis and Systemic Immune Activation/Inflammation Among People With Human Immunodeficiency Virus in the United States
- Zanni, Markella V;
- Foldyna, Borek;
- McCallum, Sara;
- Burdo, Tricia H;
- Looby, Sara E;
- Fitch, Kathleen V;
- Fulda, Evelynne S;
- Autissier, Patrick;
- Bloomfield, Gerald S;
- Malvestutto, Carlos D;
- Fichtenbaum, Carl J;
- Overton, Edgar T;
- Aberg, Judith A;
- Erlandson, Kristine M;
- Campbell, Thomas B;
- Ellsworth, Grant B;
- Sheth, Anandi N;
- Taiwo, Babafemi;
- Currier, Judith S;
- Hoffmann, Udo;
- Lu, Michael T;
- Douglas, Pamela S;
- Ribaudo, Heather J;
- Grinspoon, Steven K
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciac767Abstract
Background
Among people with HIV (PWH), sex differences in presentations of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) may be influenced by differences in coronary plaque parameters, immune/inflammatory biomarkers, or relationships therein.Methods
REPRIEVE, a primary ASCVD prevention trial, enrolled antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated PWH. At entry, a subset of US participants underwent coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) and immune phenotyping (n = 755 CTA; n = 725 CTA + immune). We characterized sex differences in coronary plaque and immune/inflammatory biomarkers and compared immune-plaque relationships by sex. Unless noted otherwise, analyses adjust for ASCVD risk score.Results
The primary analysis cohort included 631 males and 124 females. ASCVD risk was higher among males (median: 4.9% vs 2.1%), while obesity rates were higher among females (48% vs 21%). Prevalence of any plaque and of plaque with either ≥1 visible noncalcified portion or vulnerable features (NC/V-P) was lower among females overall and controlling for relevant risk factors (RR [95% CI] for any plaque: .67 [.50, .92]; RR for NC/V-P: .71 [.51, 1.00] [adjusted for ASCVD risk score and body mass index]). Females showed higher levels of IL-6, hs-CRP, and D-dimer and lower levels of Lp-PLA2 (P < .001 for all). Higher levels of Lp-PLA2, MCP-1, and oxLDL were associated with higher plaque (P < .02) and NC/V-P prevalence, with no differences by sex. Among females but not males, D-dimer was associated with higher prevalence of NC/V-P (interaction P = .055).Conclusions
Among US PWH, females had a lower prevalence of plaque and NC/V-P, as well as differences in key immune/inflammatory biomarkers. Immune-plaque relationships differed by sex for D-dimer but not other tested parameters. Clinical Trial Registration. ClinicalTrials.gov; identifier: NCT0234429 (date of initial registration: 22 January 2015).Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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