News

Poorly Controlled HIV Hastens Decline in Lung Function


 

FROM THE CONFERENCE ON RETROVIRUSES AND OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS

"I think that what we are seeing is a real effect. Now whether it’s generalizable to other cohorts is going to be an important question, and our work with the Lung HIV Consortium, which is a multicenter site, will hopefully answer that question," he said. "But I think that what we are seeing is individuals who are living longer with controlled HIV, so we may be seeing much like we see accelerated cardiovascular disease [and] accelerated nephrotoxicity – that maybe the lungs are now implicated as another end organ of chronic HIV infection even when controlled."

He acknowledged that it was hard in this study to tease apart the effects of smoking and HIV on lung function, given that most of the cohort smoked. But on the flip side, "it makes it nice because it’s a homogenous population, to get rid of the effect of smoking."

Dr. Drummond disclosed that he had no relevant conflicts of interest.

Pages

Recommended Reading

HIV Is Independent Risk Factor for Arterial Inflammation
MDedge Family Medicine
Small Changes Yield Big Bang for Chlamydia Screening Buck
MDedge Family Medicine
San Francisco Sees Positive Trends in Early ART Initiation
MDedge Family Medicine
Flu Rates Decline in Wake of Connecticut's Vaccine Rule
MDedge Family Medicine
Telbivudine Cut Mother-to-Infant Hepatitis B Transmission
MDedge Family Medicine
Innovation Needed to Move Adult Immunization Forward
MDedge Family Medicine
New Results Challenge Laser Effectiveness for Onychomycosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Anemia Spikes Infection Risk in Patients Initiating RA Therapy
MDedge Family Medicine
Few Adolescent Males Are Getting the HPV Vaccine
MDedge Family Medicine
Inappropriate Bronchiolitis Care Plummets With Peer Networking
MDedge Family Medicine