Co-morbidities in persons infected with HIV: increased burden with older age and negative effects on health-related quality of life

This study sought to determine the synergistic effects of age and HIV infection on medical co-morbidity burden, along with its clinical correlates and impact on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) across the lifespan in HIV. Participants included 262 individuals across four groups stratified by a...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS patient care and STDs 2013-01, Vol.27 (1), p.5-16
Hauptverfasser: Rodriguez-Penney, Alan T, Iudicello, Jennifer E, Riggs, Patricia K, Doyle, Katie, Ellis, Ronald J, Letendre, Scott L, Grant, Igor, Woods, Steven Paul
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study sought to determine the synergistic effects of age and HIV infection on medical co-morbidity burden, along with its clinical correlates and impact on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) across the lifespan in HIV. Participants included 262 individuals across four groups stratified by age (≤40 and ≥50 years) and HIV serostatus. Medical co-morbidity burden was assessed using a modified version of the Charlson Co-morbidity Index (CCI). Multiple regression accounting for potentially confounding demographic, psychiatric, and medical factors revealed an interaction between age and HIV infection on the CCI, with the highest medical co-morbidity burden in the older HIV+cohort. Nearly half of the older HIV+group had at least one major medical co-morbidity, with the most prevalent being diabetes (17.8%), syndromic neurocognitive impairment (15.4%), and malignancy (12.2%). Affective distress and detectable plasma viral load were significantly associated with the CCI in the younger and older HIV-infected groups, respectively. Greater co-morbidity burden was uniquely associated with lower physical HRQoL across the lifespan. These findings highlight the prevalence and clinical impact of co-morbidities in older HIV-infected adults and underscore the importance of early detection and treatment efforts that might enhance HIV disease outcomes.
ISSN:1087-2914
1557-7449
DOI:10.1089/apc.2012.0329