Background: Although adipose tissue has been proposed to harbor part of the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) reservoir, the influence of host characteristics, including sex and body mass index (BMI), on measures of HIV-1 persistence during antiretroviral therapy (ART) are incompletely understood. Methods: We evaluated age, sex, BMI, waist circumference, years on ART, pre-ART HIV-1 RNA, pre-ART CD4+ T-cell count, and initial ART regimen with measures of HIV-1 persistence in blood (residual viremia, cellular HIV-1 DNA and RNA) in a cohort of 295 individuals with well-documented long-term virologic suppression (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL) on ART (AIDS Clinical Trials Group study A5321). Results: Men were more likely than women to have detectable plasma HIV-1 RNA by single-copy assay (52% vs 29%; P =. 003), and the proportion of participants with detectable residual viremia increased in a stepwise fashion by BMI category (normal weight or underweight, 38%; overweight, 50%; and obese, 55%). ART regimen type was not associated with measures of HIV-1 persistence after controlling for ART duration. Conclusions: Sex and obesity are independently associated with residual viremia in people on long-term ART. Additional studies to confirm these relationships and to define the mechanisms by which sex and obesity affect HIV-1 persistence are needed to inform HIV-1 cure strategies.
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Cyktor, J. C., Bosch, R. J., Mar, H., Macatangay, B. J., Collier, A. C., Hogg, E., … Gandhi, R. T. (2021). Association of male sex and obesity with residual plasma human immunodeficiency virus 1 viremia in persons on long-term antiretroviral therapy. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 223(3), 462–470. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiaa373