Inflammatory Phenotypes Predict Changes in Arterial Stiffness following Antiretroviral Therapy Initiation

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Abstract

Background: Inflammation drives vascular dysfunction in HIV, but in low-income settings causes of inflammation are multiple, and include infectious and environmental factors. We hypothesized that patients with advanced immunosuppression could be stratified into inflammatory phenotypes that predicted changes in vascular dysfunction on ART. Methods: We recruited Malawian adults with CD4 <100 cells/μL 2 weeks after starting ART in the REALITY trial (NCT01825031). Carotid femoral pulse-wave velocity (cfPWV) measured arterial stiffness 2, 12, 24, and 42 weeks post-ART initiation. Plasma inflammation markers were measured by electrochemiluminescence at weeks 2 and 42. Hierarchical clustering on principal components identified inflammatory clusters. Results: 211 participants with HIV grouped into 3 inflammatory clusters representing 51 (24%; cluster-1), 153 (73%; cluster-2), and 7 (3%; cluster-3) individuals. Cluster-1 showed markedly higher CD4 and CD8 T-cell expression of HLADR and PD-1 versus cluster-2 and cluster-3 (all P

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Kelly, C., Tinago, W., Alber, D., Hunter, P., Luckhurst, N., Connolly, J., … Khoo, S. (2020). Inflammatory Phenotypes Predict Changes in Arterial Stiffness following Antiretroviral Therapy Initiation. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 71(9), 2389–2397. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciaa186

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