Integrase Inhibitors are Associated with Neuropsychiatric Symptoms in Women with HIV

Objective Women with HIV(WWH) are more likely to discontinue/change antiretroviral therapy(ART) due to side effects including neuropsychiatric symptoms. Efavirenz and integrase strand transfer inhibitors(INSTIs) are particularly concerning. We focused on these ART agents and neuropsychiatric symptom...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neuroimmune pharmacology 2023-06, Vol.18 (1-2), p.1-8
Hauptverfasser: Rubin, Leah H., O’Halloran, Jane A., Williams, Dionna W., Li, Yuliang, Fitzgerald, Kathryn C., Dastgheyb, Raha, Damron, Alexandra L., Maki, Pauline M., Spence, Amanda B., Sharma, Anjali, Gustafson, Deborah R., Milam, Joel, Weber, Kathleen M., Adimora, Adaora A., Ofotokun, Igho, Fischl, Margaret A., Konkle-Parker, Deborah, Xu, Yanxun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective Women with HIV(WWH) are more likely to discontinue/change antiretroviral therapy(ART) due to side effects including neuropsychiatric symptoms. Efavirenz and integrase strand transfer inhibitors(INSTIs) are particularly concerning. We focused on these ART agents and neuropsychiatric symptoms in previously developed subgroups of WWH that differed on key sociodemographic factors as well as longitudinal behavioral and clinical profiles. WWH from the Women’s Interagency HIV Study were included if they had ART data available, completed the Perceived Stress Scale-10 and PTSD Checklist-Civilian. Questionnaires were completed biannually beginning in 2008 through 2016. To examine ART-symptom associations, constrained continuation ratio model via penalized maximum likelihood were fit within 5 subgroups of WWH. Data from 1882 WWH contributed a total of 4598 observations. 353 women were previously defined as primarily having well-controlled HIV with vascular comorbidities, 463 with legacy effects(CD4 nadir 
ISSN:1557-1890
1557-1904
1557-1904
DOI:10.1007/s11481-021-10042-3