Abacavir
Not Associated with Inflammation in 2 Large U.S. HIV Cohorts
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SUMMARY:
Patients
who took the NRTI abacavir
(Ziagen, also in the Trizivir
and Epzicom
combination pills) did not show elevated levels of biomarkers
of inflammation and cardiovascular risk, according to
an analysis of HIV positive men in the large MACS cohort
and women in the WIHS cohort, as reported in the July
17, 2010 issue of AIDS. These findings add
to a conflicting body of evidence about the link between
abacavir and cardiovascular disease. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
Inflammation,
its role in disease progression, and its contribution to non-AIDS
conditions such as cardiovascular disease has become a hot topic
in HIV research over the past few years.
At
the 2008 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections
researchers studying the large D:A:D cohort reported that HIV
positive people who recently used abacavir were more
likely to experience heart attacks. Since that time, analyses
of other observational studies and randomized clinical trials
have produced conflicting data, with some seeing a similar association
between abacavir and cardiovascular diseases and others finding
no such link.
Since
cardiovascular disease has been associated with biomarkers of
inflammation, coagulation (blood clotting), and endothelial (blood
vessel) dysfunction in numerous studies including the SMART
treatment interruption trial, investigators have also looked
at whether abacavir use might be association with biomarker changes;
some suspected that inflammation might be related to low-level
abacavir hypersensitivity reactions. But here too, findings have
been inconsistent.
In the most recent analysis, Frank Palella from Northwestern University
and colleagues with the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) and
Women's Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) assessed associations between
abacavir use and systemic, or whole body, inflammation.
This nested case-control study included 180 pairs of participants
from MACS, a long-running cohort of gay and bisexual men in 4
U.S. cities (Baltimore, Chicago, Pittsburgh and Los Angeles),
and 328 pairs of women from WIHS, a cohort of HIV positive and
at-risk women in several U.S. cities. Each demographically matched
pair included 1 HIV positive individual who took abacavir as part
of an antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimen and 1 who was not exposed
to the drug. Nearly half the participants smoked and more than
one third were coinfected with hepatitis C.
The researchers measured levels of high-sensitivity C-reactive
protein (hsCRP, an inflammation biomarker), interleukin-6 (IL-6,
a pro-inflammatory cytokine), and D-dimer (a by-product of coagulation)
in blood samples taken before and after initiation of combination
ART; some participants had previously used nucleoside/nucleotide
reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) monotherapy or dual therapy.
Results
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Regardless
of abacavir use, hsCRP levels rose and D-dimer levels fell
on average after starting ART. |
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CRP
increases -- indicating greater inflammation -- were seen
overall (+28 mcg/mL), as well as in the MACS men (+28 mcg/mL)
and WIHS women (+29 mcg/mL) considered separately. |
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D-dimer
decreases -- suggesting reduced coagulation -- were -27%,
-31%, and -24%, respectively. |
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IL-6
levels decreased on average among the MACS men, but did not
change in the WIHS women. |
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Despite
biomarker level changes after starting ART, average levels
of each biomarker were within generally accepted "normal"
ranges for healthy adults both before and after treatment
initiation. |
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In
an adjusted analysis, no significant differences in biomarker
levels were observed after starting ART between participants
who used abacavir and those who remained unexposed to the
drug. |
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Decreases
in D-dimer and IL-6 were significantly correlated with HIV
viral load reductions. |
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Associations
between abacavir use and average biomarker levels were affected
by suboptimal use of NRTIs before combination ART. |
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Kidney
dysfunction was equally likely among abacavir recipients and
unexposed patients. |
Based
on these findings, the researchers concluded, "Abacavir use
was not associated with plasma elevations in hsCRP, IL-6, and
D-dimer."
"Mechanisms other than increased systemic inflammation may
account for abacavir's reported association with increased cardiovascular
disease," they added. "HAART-associated reductions in
D-dimer and IL-6 were apparent regardless of abacavir use and
were correlated with HIV RNA reductions."
"This work should not be interpreted as either refuting or
supporting hypotheses suggesting associations between recent use
of abacavir (or any other ART for that matter) and cardiovascular
disease in general or specific cardiovascular disease endpoints,"
they elaborated in their discussion. "We did not undertake
evaluations of use of abacavir and cardiovascular disease nor
the assessment of plasma biomarker levels in relationship to specific
clinical events."
However, they continued, "our work does suggest that, if
recent abacavir use is indeed associated with increase risk for
adverse cardiovascular events, system inflammation is not likely
the sole or primary means by which its effects are mediated."
The authors also acknowledged that while their finding of D-dimer
and IL-6 decreases after starting ART agrees with other research
indicating that HIV suppression is associated with reduced inflammation,
they could not explain the observed increase in CRP.
Investigator affiliations: Division of Infectious Diseases, Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL; Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; Albert Einstein College of
Medicine, New York, NY; Rush University Medical Center, Chicago,
IL; University of Vermont, Burlington, VT; George Washington University,
Washington, DC.
7/13/10
Reference
FJ Palella, SJ Gange, L Benning, and others. Inflammatory biomarkers
and abacavir use in the Women's Interagency HIV Study and the
Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study. AIDS 24(11): 1657-1665 (Abstract).
July 17, 2010.
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Stories
of Success in HIV: Proven Interventions for Improving
wareness, Testing, Access to Care, and Treatment of HIV in
Communities of Color.
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Stories
of Success in HIV: Proven
Interventions for Improving wareness, Testing, Access to Care,
and Treatment of HIV in Communities of Color.
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