
July 2003 Cover
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Metabolic abnormalities associated with HIV infection, including dysglycemia and hyperlipidemia, are increasingly prevalent, and there is concern about the possibility of an association with accelerated cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease. In the current study, the
relation between the risk of such disease and the use of antiretroviral therapy was evaluated.
Researchers conducted a retrospective study of the risk of cardiovascular disease among the 36,766 patients who received care for HIV at Veterans Affairs facilities between January 1993 and June 2001.
Overall, there were 1,207 admissions for cardiovascular disease, 1,764 admissions for cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease, and 2,006 admissions for or deaths from cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease. Between 1995 and 2001, the rate of admissions
for cardiovascular disease decreased from 1.7 to .9 per 100 patient-years, and the rate of death from any cause decreased from 21.3 to 5 deaths per 100 patient-years. Patient-level regression analyses indicated that there was no relation between the use of NAs, PIs, or NNRTIs
and the hazard of cardiovascular or cerebrovascular events. However, the use of antiretroviral drugs was associated with a decreased hazard of death from any cause.
The fear of accelerated vascular disease need not compromise anti- retroviral therapy over the short term, researchers concluded. Large increases in antiretroviral drug use by a large population of HIV-positive VA patients during the second half of the 1990s were
accompanied by small decreases-- rather than the feared increases-- in the rates and hazards of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events. However, the researchers cautioned that prolonged survival among HIV-infected patients means that longer-term observations and analyses
are required.
Editor's Note: from the New England Journal of Medicine
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