Statement outlines pragmatic approach to risk
assessment; cautions against routine measurement of inflammatory
biomarkers.
Individuals with HIV have a significantly higher
risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but clinicians haven’t always understood
this connection. In a new scientific statement, the American Heart Association
(AHA) offers some causal explanations for the HIV/CVD relationship and proposes
a pragmatic approach to assessing risk for and preventing atherosclerotic CVD
(ASCVD) in patients with treated HIV infection.
The global burden of
HIV-associated CVD has tripled over the last 20 years, accounting for 2.6
million disability-adjusted life-years annually, according to the statement.
Compared with uninfected individuals, the risk of developing CVD-related
ailments for people living with HIV is 1.5 to 2 times more likely. Some clinical
factors such as smoking and viral load are more relevant for assessing risk than
other variables such as triglycerides or certain biomarkers.
The statement
outlines a risk assessment algorithm for adults who have treated, virally
suppressed HIV based on whether they have clinical ASCVD, low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol levels ≥190 mg/dL, are between the ages of 45-75, and
have diabetes. Individuals at low risk for these factors would then undergo an
ASCVD risk assessment using the American College of Cardiology/AHA ASCVD risk
estimation tool or other similar methods. The algorithm also considers whether a
patient has HIV-related risk-enhancing factors such as a CD4 count <350
cells/mm.
HIV-related factors such as advanced immunosuppression and
detectable HIV viral load appear to contribute to CVD risk, Matthew J.
Feinstein, MD, MSc, chair of the writing group for the statement, and an
assistant professor of medicine, cardiology, and preventive medicine at the
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, told CLN Stat.
“Chronic inflammation and immune activation, even when HIV is under good
control, can cause buildup of plaque in the body’s arteries (including in the
heart) and also may cause dysfunction of the heart muscle,” resulting in heart
attack, heart failure, and stroke, he explained.
The AHA statement cited as
additional contributors other common heart disease risk factors such as smoking
and hypertension.
All of these factors underscore how important it is for
individuals living with HIV to continue taking their antiretroviral (ART)
therapies regularly, Feinstein emphasized. Some have questioned the impact of
certain HIV medications on heart disease risk, particularly their effects on
blood cholesterol. However, the common thought now is they are not a primary
driver of risk, considering that ART therapies have become less toxic over time.
These drugs are essential to treating HIV and reducing non-AIDS events like CVD,
Feinstein said.
With the exception of simvastatin and lovastatin, “stains
appear to be generally safe in HIV although more data are needed to fully
understand the risks and benefits of these and other CVD-preventive therapies in
HIV,” he added. “What is clear is that treating HIV with medications is far
superior from an overall health as well as heart health standpoint compared with
not treating HIV.”
Deviating from 2018 guidelines AHA issued jointly with the
American College of Cardiology, the writing group did not count triglycerides as
a significant risk enhancer for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD).
“Studies in large HIV cohorts demonstrated that triglyceride levels, which are
often labile and sensitive to ART changes in HIV, either were not predictive of
CVD end points independently of other traditional CVD risk factors or were
associated with marginally elevated ASCVD risk,” the authors
explained.
Feinstein clarified that the risk calculators in the statement
(such as the ACC/AHA ASCVD risk estimator) actually do incorporate triglycerides
into the risk assessment/score, “albeit somewhat indirectly.” As he explained,
“triglycerides are strongly associated with total cholesterol, as they are a
major part of the total cholesterol calculation, and inversely associated with
high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. Both total cholesterol and HDL
cholesterol are factored into the ASCVD risk assessment.”
Although their
approaches to triglycerides differ, the two AHA statements address different
populations, Feinstein noted. The 2018 guidelines jointly issued with ACC were
for the general population and not HIV-specific. The 2019 statement is the first
to address HIV.
The writing group also decided not to recommend routine
measurement of subclinical atherosclerosis via imaging or inflammatory
biomarkers. “The reason we don’t outright recommend doing this for particular
groups of patients is we don’t have enough data for people with HIV to support
routine use of these measurements,” Feinstein explained. Such measurements are
most appropriate at intermediate risk levels (7.5% to 20% 10-year ASCVD risk in
the general population and probably lower predicted ASCVD risk levels in HIV,
given higher unmeasured risk factors), “when a positive or negative may
significantly reclassify someone’s predicted risk for ASCVD and therefore change
the apparent risk/benefit of starting lipid-lowering therapy, for instance,”
according to Feinstein.
In its statement, the working group mentions that
findings of subclinical atherosclerosis via imaging or elevated levels of
certain biomarkers (such as C-reactive protein) may be used to reclassify risk,
leading someone to be considered higher risk and therefore more likely to
benefit from lipid-lowering therapy. Bottom line: The measurement of these
markers is essentially up to individual patients and clinicians, with the
understanding that intermediate risk levels “are where we tend to learn the most
in terms of risk reclassification from these complementary studies,” Feinstein
summarized.