Cognitive decline has been a major concern for people living with HIV as they age.
February 23, 2017
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It is possible that antiretroviral (ARV) treatment of HIV may combat
the apparent effect the virus has on brain aging and associated
cognitive decline.
Researchers in the ongoing COBRA
study in academic centers in London and Amsterdam recruited 134
HIV-positive participants on successful ARV treatment with an average
age of 57.4 and closely matched them with a control group of 79
HIV-negative individuals. (A respective 120 and 76 of them completed
follow-up.) They presented interim findings about the results of two
years of cutting-edge MRI-based tests and neuropyschometric testing at
the 2017 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI)
in Seattle.
The COBRA study is in line with another
presented at CROI that found that HIV is associated with brain injury.
In the case of this study, this meant smaller gray matter, abnormal
white matter microstructure and the finding that the participants living
with HIV had worse cognitive performance compared with their peers who
did not have virus. Because the other study did not follow participants
over time as COBRA did, it could not, however, determine how brain
injury might progress among people with HIV, in particular those on
fully suppressive ARV treatment.
During the two years
of follow-up, the COBRA researchers did not see any excess decline in
any of the measures of brain injury or cognitive function among the
HIV-positive participants compared with the control group. Participants
in both groups experienced about a 1 percent annual decline in brain
volume.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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