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Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity

BACKGROUND: The longitudinal rate and profile of cognitive decline in persons with stable, treated, and virally suppressed HIV infection is not established. To address this question, the current study quantifies the rate of cognitive decline in a cohort of virally suppressed HIV+ persons using clini...

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Autores principales: Gott, Chloe, Gates, Thomas, Dermody, Nadene, Brew, Bruce J., Cysique, Lucette A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5338778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28264037
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171887
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author Gott, Chloe
Gates, Thomas
Dermody, Nadene
Brew, Bruce J.
Cysique, Lucette A.
author_facet Gott, Chloe
Gates, Thomas
Dermody, Nadene
Brew, Bruce J.
Cysique, Lucette A.
author_sort Gott, Chloe
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The longitudinal rate and profile of cognitive decline in persons with stable, treated, and virally suppressed HIV infection is not established. To address this question, the current study quantifies the rate of cognitive decline in a cohort of virally suppressed HIV+ persons using clinically relevant definitions of decline, and determine cognitive trajectories taking into account historical and baseline HAND status. METHODS: Ninety-six HIV+ (clinically stable and virally undetectable) and 44 demographically comparable HIV- participants underwent standard neuropsychological testing at baseline and 18-months follow-up. We described clinically relevant cognitive trajectories based on standard definitions of historical and baseline HAND status and cognitive decline. Historical, moderate to severe HAND was formally diagnosed at the start of the cART era in 15/96 participants based on clinical neurological and neuropsychological assessment. The same standard of care has been applied to all participants at St. Vincent’s Hospital Infectious Disease Department for the duration of their HIV infection (median of 20 years). RESULTS: Relative to HIV- controls (4.5%), 14% of HIV+ participants declined (p = .11), they also scored significantly lower on the global change score (p = .03), processing speed (p = .02), and mental flexibility/inhibition (p = .02) domains. Having HAND at baseline significantly predicted cognitive decline at follow up (p = .005). We determined seven clinically relevant cognitive trajectories taking into account whether participant has a history of HAND prior to study entry (yes/no); their results on the baseline assessment (baseline impairment: yes/no) and their results on the 18-month follow up (decline or stable) which in order of prevalence were: 1) No HAND history, no baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (39%), 2) No HAND history, baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (35%), 3) History of HAND; baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (9%) 4) No history of HAND, baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up decline (7%), 5) History of HAND, no baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (3%), 6) No HAND history, no baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up decline (3%) 7) History of HAND, baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up decline (3%). There was no relationship between cognitive decline (taking into account historical and baseline HAND) and traditional HIV disease biomarkers. CONCLUSIONS: Despite long-term viral suppression, we found mostly subclinical levels of decline in psychomotor speed and executive functioning (mental flexibility and cognitive inhibition); well-established markers of HAND progression. Moreover, 57% of our cohort is undergoing slow evolution of their disease, challenging the notion of prevalent neurocognitive stability in virally suppressed HIV infection.
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spelling pubmed-53387782017-03-10 Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity Gott, Chloe Gates, Thomas Dermody, Nadene Brew, Bruce J. Cysique, Lucette A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The longitudinal rate and profile of cognitive decline in persons with stable, treated, and virally suppressed HIV infection is not established. To address this question, the current study quantifies the rate of cognitive decline in a cohort of virally suppressed HIV+ persons using clinically relevant definitions of decline, and determine cognitive trajectories taking into account historical and baseline HAND status. METHODS: Ninety-six HIV+ (clinically stable and virally undetectable) and 44 demographically comparable HIV- participants underwent standard neuropsychological testing at baseline and 18-months follow-up. We described clinically relevant cognitive trajectories based on standard definitions of historical and baseline HAND status and cognitive decline. Historical, moderate to severe HAND was formally diagnosed at the start of the cART era in 15/96 participants based on clinical neurological and neuropsychological assessment. The same standard of care has been applied to all participants at St. Vincent’s Hospital Infectious Disease Department for the duration of their HIV infection (median of 20 years). RESULTS: Relative to HIV- controls (4.5%), 14% of HIV+ participants declined (p = .11), they also scored significantly lower on the global change score (p = .03), processing speed (p = .02), and mental flexibility/inhibition (p = .02) domains. Having HAND at baseline significantly predicted cognitive decline at follow up (p = .005). We determined seven clinically relevant cognitive trajectories taking into account whether participant has a history of HAND prior to study entry (yes/no); their results on the baseline assessment (baseline impairment: yes/no) and their results on the 18-month follow up (decline or stable) which in order of prevalence were: 1) No HAND history, no baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (39%), 2) No HAND history, baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (35%), 3) History of HAND; baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (9%) 4) No history of HAND, baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up decline (7%), 5) History of HAND, no baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up stable (3%), 6) No HAND history, no baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up decline (3%) 7) History of HAND, baseline impairment, 18-month follow-up decline (3%). There was no relationship between cognitive decline (taking into account historical and baseline HAND) and traditional HIV disease biomarkers. CONCLUSIONS: Despite long-term viral suppression, we found mostly subclinical levels of decline in psychomotor speed and executive functioning (mental flexibility and cognitive inhibition); well-established markers of HAND progression. Moreover, 57% of our cohort is undergoing slow evolution of their disease, challenging the notion of prevalent neurocognitive stability in virally suppressed HIV infection. Public Library of Science 2017-03-06 /pmc/articles/PMC5338778/ /pubmed/28264037 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171887 Text en © 2017 Gott et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gott, Chloe
Gates, Thomas
Dermody, Nadene
Brew, Bruce J.
Cysique, Lucette A.
Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
title Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
title_full Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
title_fullStr Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
title_full_unstemmed Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
title_short Cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed HIV-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
title_sort cognitive change trajectories in virally suppressed hiv-infected individuals indicate high prevalence of disease activity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5338778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28264037
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171887
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