Frailty among HIV-1 Infected Adults under Antiretroviral Therapy in Indonesia

Author:

Wulunggono Wulunggono1ORCID,Yunihastuti Evy1ORCID,Shatri Hamzah1ORCID,Wahyudi Edy Rizal1ORCID,Ophinni Youdiil2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia

2. Department of Pathology, Graduate School of Medicine, Kobe University, Kobe, Japan

Abstract

Background:Increasing age of HIV-1 infected population brought about the risk of frailty as comorbidity, whose prevalence is higher in low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Indonesia as an LMIC also bears a major burden of HIV-1 epidemic with a similarly aging population, but the prevalence of frailty and its predictors are unknown.Objectives:To identify the prevalence of frailty and analyze its associated factors, among HIV-1 infected adults under antiretroviral therapy in Indonesia.Methods:A cross-sectional study was conducted among HIV-infected individuals with inclusion criteria of age ≥30 years old and underwent ART for at least 6 months. The main assessment was done using Fried’s frailty phenotype score, which categorizes subjects into non-frail, pre-frail, or frail. Factors associated with frailty were characterized and multiple logistic regression analysis was performed.Results:A total of 164 subjects were recruited; male subjects were 118 (72%), the median age was 40.5 years old, and the median CD4 nadir was 53 cells/μl. Frailty was identified among 90 (54.9%) subjects with 84 (51.2%) identified as pre-frail and 6 (3.7%) as frail, with dominant frailty phenotype was weakness in grip strength. The multivariate model showed that depression was the only factor significantly correlated with pre-frailty and frailty (OR 2.14; 95% CI 1.04-4.43, p=0.036).Conclusion:Frailty is a common occurrence among HIV-infected patients under ART, with depression as an independent predictive factor.

Funder

Universitas Indonesia

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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