Effect of Cumulating Exposure to Abacavir on the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Events in Patients From the Swiss HIV Cohort Study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_A6F894010FA8
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Effect of Cumulating Exposure to Abacavir on the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Events in Patients From the Swiss HIV Cohort Study.
Journal
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (1999)
Author(s)
Young J., Xiao Y., Moodie E.E., Abrahamowicz M., Klein M.B., Bernasconi E., Schmid P., Calmy A., Cavassini M., Cusini A., Weber R., Bucher H.C.
Working group(s)
Swiss HIV Cohort Study
Contributor(s)
Aubert V., Barth J., Battegay M., Bernasconi E., Böni J., Bucher HC., Burton-Jeangros C., Calmy A., Cavassini M., Egger M., Elzi L., Fehr J., Fellay J., Furrer H., Fux CA., Gorgievski M., Günthard H., Haerry D., Hasse B., Hirsch HH., Hösli I., Kahlert C., Kaiser L., Keiser O., Klimkait T., Kovari H., Ledergerber B., Martinetti G., de Tejada B., Metzner K., Müller N., Nadal D., Pantaleo G., Rauch A., Regenass S., Rickenbach M., Rudin C., Schmid P., Schultze D., Schöni-Affolter F., Schüpbach J., Speck R., Taffé P., Tarr P., Telenti A., Trkola A., Vernazza P., Weber R., Yerly S.
ISSN
1944-7884 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1525-4135
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
69
Number
4
Pages
413-421
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with HIV exposed to the antiretroviral drug abacavir may have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). There is concern that this association arises because of a channeling bias. Even if exposure is a risk, it is not clear how that risk changes as exposure cumulates.
METHODS: We assess the effect of exposure to abacavir on the risk of CVD events in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. We use a new marginal structural Cox model to estimate the effect of abacavir as a flexible function of past exposures while accounting for risk factors that potentially lie on a causal pathway between exposure to abacavir and CVD.
RESULTS: A total of 11,856 patients were followed for a median of 6.6 years; 365 patients had a CVD event (4.6 events per 1000 patient-years). In a conventional Cox model, recent--but not cumulative--exposure to abacavir increased the risk of a CVD event. In the new marginal structural Cox model, continued exposure to abacavir during the past 4 years increased the risk of a CVD event (hazard ratio = 2.06; 95% confidence interval: 1.43 to 2.98). The estimated function for the effect of past exposures suggests that exposure during the past 6-36 months caused the greatest increase in risk.
CONCLUSIONS: Abacavir increases the risk of a CVD event: the effect of exposure is not immediate, rather the risk increases as exposure cumulates over the past few years. This gradual increase in risk is not consistent with a rapidly acting mechanism, such as acute inflammation.
Keywords
Adult, Anti-HIV Agents/administration & dosage, Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use, Cardiovascular Diseases/chemically induced, Dideoxynucleosides/adverse effects, Dideoxynucleosides/therapeutic use, Female, HIV Infections/drug therapy, HIV Infections/epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Switzerland/epidemiology
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
08/01/2016 11:48
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:11
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