This remains the case even when HIV is well treated with antiretrovirals.
June 6, 2017
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People living with HIV have a higher risk of impaired respiratory
health, even when they are on antiretrovirals (ARVs) and have a fully
suppressed viral load.
Publishing their findings in HIV
Medicine, researchers conducted a study of 197 people with HIV and 93
people without the virus attending HIV and sexual health outpatient
clinics in London in 2015.
The researchers assessed the
participants’ respiratory health with the St. George’s Respiratory
Questionnaire (SGRQ), their level of breathlessness with the Medical
Research Council (MRC) questionnaire on the condition, and their lung
function with a spirometry test.
The HIV-positive
participants had worse respiratory health. Their median SGRQ total score
was 12, compared with 6 among the HIV-negative individuals. Forty-seven
percent of HIV-positive participants and 24 percent of HIV-negative
participants had an MRC breathless score of 2 or above. A respective 11
percent and 9 percent had airflow obstruction.
After
adjusting the data for age, gender, smoking, body mass index and
depression, the investigators found that living with HIV was associated
with higher SGRQ and MRC scores, including a 2.45-fold increased risk of
having an MRC score of at least 2 and a 1.54-fold increased SGRQ score.
These findings were similar when those people with HIV who did not have
an undetectable viral load were excluded from the analysis.
The
researchers concluded: “Despite effective [ARV treatment], impaired
respiratory health appears more common in HIV-positive adults, and has a
significant impact on health-related quality of life.”
To read the aidsmap article, click here.
To read the study, click here.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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