Factors Associated with Fatal COVID-19 Outcomes among People Living with HIV: A Cohort Study

Author:

Drobyshevskaya Elena1ORCID,Lebedev Aleksey23ORCID,Pronin Alexander4ORCID,Bobkova Marina3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Department, Moscow Regional Center for the Prevention and Control of AIDS and Infectious Diseases, Moscow, Russia

2. Laboratory of T-Lymphotropic Viruses, Gamaleya National Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology, Moscow, Russia

3. Department of Virology, I. Mechnikov Institute of Vaccine and Sera, Moscow, Russia

4. Medical Department, Moscow Regional Center for the Prevention and Control of AIDS and Infectious Diseases, Moscow, Russia

Abstract

Background: People living with HIV (PLHIV) are at increased risk of COVID-19 death. However, information about whether factors related to the HIV-infection influence the COVID-19 outcome still remains conflicting. Objective: Here, we evaluate the risk factors for fatal COVID-19 in a cohort of PLHIV from the Moscow region, aged >18 years and diagnosed with COVID-19 between March 2020 and December 2021. Methods: Demographic, clinical and laboratory data were compared between different COVID-19 outcomes. To analyze the risk factors associated with COVID-19 death, we employed the logistic regression method. A total of 566 PLHIV were included in the analysis. Results: The majority of individuals, 338 (59.7%), were male; 194 (34.3%) were on antiretroviral therapy; 296 (52.3%) had a comorbidity; 174 (30.7%) of patients had drug and/or alcohol dependence; 160 (33.1%) patients had CD4 counts <200 cells/μl; 253 (51.9%) had undetectable viral load. Our analysis revealed that PLHIV >55 years old (OR, 12.88 [95% CI, 2.32-71.62]), patients with a viral load of more than 1000 copies/ml (OR, 2.45 [95%CI, 1.01-5.98]) and with CD4 counts <200 cell/μl (OR, 2.54 [95%CI, 1.02-6.28]), as well as with a history of cachexia (OR, 3.62 [95%CI, 1.26-10.39]) and pneumocystis pneumonia (OR, 2.47 [95%CI, 1.03-5.92]), and drug/alcohol dependence (OR, 2.70 [95%CI, 1.36-5.39]) were significantly more likely to die from COVID-19. Conclusion: These data show that people with advanced HIV-1 infection have an increased risk of fatal COVID-19 outcomes and that there is a need to improve this population’s access to health services and, hence, increase their survival rates.

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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