Affiliation:
1. Department of Epidemiology, College of Public Health and Health Professions, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, United States
2. Florida Department of Health, Division of Disease Control and Health Protection, Bureau of Communicable Diseases, HIV/AIDS Section, Tallahassee, Florida, United States
Abstract
Background:
Evidence regarding the association between HIV viral load (VL) and hypertension
is inconsistent. In this study, we investigated the relationship using viremia copy-years
(VCY), a cumulative measure of HIV plasma viral burden.
Methods:
Data were analyzed for 686 PLWH in the Florida Cohort Study, who had at least five
years of VL data before the baseline. VL data were extracted from Enhanced HIV/AIDS Reporting
System (eHARS) and used to define peak VL (pVL), recent VL (rVL), and undetectable VL (uVL:
rVL<50copies/mL). A five-year VCY (log10 copy × years/mL) before the baseline investigation,
was calculated and divided into 5 groups (≤2.7, 2.8-3.7, 3.8-4.7, 4.8-5.7 and >5.7) for analysis. Hypertension
was determined based on hypertension diagnosis from medical records. Multivariable logistic
regression was used for association analysis.
Results:
Of the total sample, 277 (40.4%) participants were hypertensive. Compared to the participants
with lowest VCY (≤2.7 log10 copy × years/mL), the odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence interval
[95% CI] for hypertension of the remaining four groups, in order, were 1.91 [1.11, 3.29], 1.91
[1.03, 3.53], 2.27 [1.29, 3.99], and 1.25 [0.65, 2.42], respectively, controlling for confounders. The
association was independent of pVL, rVL, and uVL, each of which was not significantly associated
with hypertension.
Conclusion:
Persistent HIV infection is a risk factor for hypertension among PLWH. Information
provided by VCY is more effective than single time-point VL measures in investigating HIV infection-
hypertension relationship. The findings of this study support the significance of continuous viral
suppression in hypertension prevention among PLWH.
Funder
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Virology,Infectious Diseases
Cited by
11 articles.
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