The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe: how well are we doing?

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The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe : how well are we doing? / Shahmanesh, Maryam; Schultze, Anna; Burns, Fiona; Kirk, Ole; Lundgren, Jens; Mussini, Cristina; Pedersen, Court; De Wit, Stephane; Kutsyna, Galyna; Mocroft, Amanda; EuroSIDA in EuroCoord.

I: AIDS, Bind 30, Nr. 16, 23.10.2016, s. 2505-2518.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Shahmanesh, M, Schultze, A, Burns, F, Kirk, O, Lundgren, J, Mussini, C, Pedersen, C, De Wit, S, Kutsyna, G, Mocroft, A & EuroSIDA in EuroCoord 2016, 'The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe: how well are we doing?', AIDS, bind 30, nr. 16, s. 2505-2518. https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001207

APA

Shahmanesh, M., Schultze, A., Burns, F., Kirk, O., Lundgren, J., Mussini, C., Pedersen, C., De Wit, S., Kutsyna, G., Mocroft, A., & EuroSIDA in EuroCoord (2016). The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe: how well are we doing? AIDS, 30(16), 2505-2518. https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001207

Vancouver

Shahmanesh M, Schultze A, Burns F, Kirk O, Lundgren J, Mussini C o.a. The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe: how well are we doing? AIDS. 2016 okt. 23;30(16):2505-2518. https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001207

Author

Shahmanesh, Maryam ; Schultze, Anna ; Burns, Fiona ; Kirk, Ole ; Lundgren, Jens ; Mussini, Cristina ; Pedersen, Court ; De Wit, Stephane ; Kutsyna, Galyna ; Mocroft, Amanda ; EuroSIDA in EuroCoord. / The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe : how well are we doing?. I: AIDS. 2016 ; Bind 30, Nr. 16. s. 2505-2518.

Bibtex

@article{beea6481fe114b66ac25e7231279197b,
title = "The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe: how well are we doing?",
abstract = "OBJECTIVES: HIV has become a chronic condition associated with comorbidities. We investigated cardiovascular risk and risk modification in a European HIV cohort.METHODS: EuroSIDA patients (from 1 January 2000) for whom cardiovascular risk could be calculated (DAD risk equation) were included in the analysis. Moderate-to-high risk was defined as 5-year cardiovascular risk more than 5% and risk modification as two measurements meeting the European AIDS Clinical Society guidelines. Factors associated with risk development and modifications were investigated using Poisson regression.RESULTS: Of 8762 individuals, 32.1% were hypertensive, 45.0% had high cholesterol, 47.4% were current smokers, and 27.1% were overweight. A total of 1504 (17.2%) had a 5-year cardiovascular risk of more than 5%. Of 7258 individuals with a 5-year risk less than 5%, 1905 (26.2%) developed cardiovascular risk more than 5% (6.53/100 person-years). These patients were more likely to be older, men, living in East Europe, with traditional cardiovascular risk factors. MSM with longer exposure to antiretroviral therapy, low CD4 nadir, higher current CD4 and prior AIDs events were more likely to develop cardiovascular risk. Those on antihypertensive treatment and living in central Europe were less likely to develop cardiovascular risk. Of those clinically indicated for risk modification, 1205 of 2077 (58.0%) successfully modified BP; 1283 of 3919 (32.8%) stopped smoking; 277 of 1394 (19.9%) modified cholesterol and 543 of 2163 (25.1%) reduced their BMI. There was variation in modification of individual risk factors, by sex, age, HIV-related factors and region of follow-up. Risk modification for BP and smoking improved over time (P < 0.001).CONCLUSION: Cardiovascular risk was common. More than half modified their cardiovascular risk, and this improved over time.",
author = "Maryam Shahmanesh and Anna Schultze and Fiona Burns and Ole Kirk and Jens Lundgren and Cristina Mussini and Court Pedersen and {De Wit}, Stephane and Galyna Kutsyna and Amanda Mocroft and {EuroSIDA in EuroCoord}",
year = "2016",
month = oct,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1097/QAD.0000000000001207",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "2505--2518",
journal = "AIDS",
issn = "1350-2840",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Ltd.",
number = "16",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The cardiovascular risk management for people living with HIV in Europe

T2 - how well are we doing?

AU - Shahmanesh, Maryam

AU - Schultze, Anna

AU - Burns, Fiona

AU - Kirk, Ole

AU - Lundgren, Jens

AU - Mussini, Cristina

AU - Pedersen, Court

AU - De Wit, Stephane

AU - Kutsyna, Galyna

AU - Mocroft, Amanda

AU - EuroSIDA in EuroCoord

PY - 2016/10/23

Y1 - 2016/10/23

N2 - OBJECTIVES: HIV has become a chronic condition associated with comorbidities. We investigated cardiovascular risk and risk modification in a European HIV cohort.METHODS: EuroSIDA patients (from 1 January 2000) for whom cardiovascular risk could be calculated (DAD risk equation) were included in the analysis. Moderate-to-high risk was defined as 5-year cardiovascular risk more than 5% and risk modification as two measurements meeting the European AIDS Clinical Society guidelines. Factors associated with risk development and modifications were investigated using Poisson regression.RESULTS: Of 8762 individuals, 32.1% were hypertensive, 45.0% had high cholesterol, 47.4% were current smokers, and 27.1% were overweight. A total of 1504 (17.2%) had a 5-year cardiovascular risk of more than 5%. Of 7258 individuals with a 5-year risk less than 5%, 1905 (26.2%) developed cardiovascular risk more than 5% (6.53/100 person-years). These patients were more likely to be older, men, living in East Europe, with traditional cardiovascular risk factors. MSM with longer exposure to antiretroviral therapy, low CD4 nadir, higher current CD4 and prior AIDs events were more likely to develop cardiovascular risk. Those on antihypertensive treatment and living in central Europe were less likely to develop cardiovascular risk. Of those clinically indicated for risk modification, 1205 of 2077 (58.0%) successfully modified BP; 1283 of 3919 (32.8%) stopped smoking; 277 of 1394 (19.9%) modified cholesterol and 543 of 2163 (25.1%) reduced their BMI. There was variation in modification of individual risk factors, by sex, age, HIV-related factors and region of follow-up. Risk modification for BP and smoking improved over time (P < 0.001).CONCLUSION: Cardiovascular risk was common. More than half modified their cardiovascular risk, and this improved over time.

AB - OBJECTIVES: HIV has become a chronic condition associated with comorbidities. We investigated cardiovascular risk and risk modification in a European HIV cohort.METHODS: EuroSIDA patients (from 1 January 2000) for whom cardiovascular risk could be calculated (DAD risk equation) were included in the analysis. Moderate-to-high risk was defined as 5-year cardiovascular risk more than 5% and risk modification as two measurements meeting the European AIDS Clinical Society guidelines. Factors associated with risk development and modifications were investigated using Poisson regression.RESULTS: Of 8762 individuals, 32.1% were hypertensive, 45.0% had high cholesterol, 47.4% were current smokers, and 27.1% were overweight. A total of 1504 (17.2%) had a 5-year cardiovascular risk of more than 5%. Of 7258 individuals with a 5-year risk less than 5%, 1905 (26.2%) developed cardiovascular risk more than 5% (6.53/100 person-years). These patients were more likely to be older, men, living in East Europe, with traditional cardiovascular risk factors. MSM with longer exposure to antiretroviral therapy, low CD4 nadir, higher current CD4 and prior AIDs events were more likely to develop cardiovascular risk. Those on antihypertensive treatment and living in central Europe were less likely to develop cardiovascular risk. Of those clinically indicated for risk modification, 1205 of 2077 (58.0%) successfully modified BP; 1283 of 3919 (32.8%) stopped smoking; 277 of 1394 (19.9%) modified cholesterol and 543 of 2163 (25.1%) reduced their BMI. There was variation in modification of individual risk factors, by sex, age, HIV-related factors and region of follow-up. Risk modification for BP and smoking improved over time (P < 0.001).CONCLUSION: Cardiovascular risk was common. More than half modified their cardiovascular risk, and this improved over time.

U2 - 10.1097/QAD.0000000000001207

DO - 10.1097/QAD.0000000000001207

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27456984

VL - 30

SP - 2505

EP - 2518

JO - AIDS

JF - AIDS

SN - 1350-2840

IS - 16

ER -

ID: 173749186