| Literature DB >> 27008536 |
Kim A Nguyen1,2, Nasheeta Peer1,2, Edward J Mills3, Andre P Kengne1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardio-metabolic risk factors are of increasing concern in HIV-infected individuals, particularly with the advent of antiretroviral therapy (ART) and the subsequent rise in longevity. However, the prevalence of cardio-metabolic abnormalities in this population and the differential contribution, if any, of HIV specific factors to their distribution, are poorly understood. Therefore, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to estimate the global prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MS) in HIV-infected populations, its variation by the different diagnostic criteria, severity of HIV infection, ART used and other major predictive characteristics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27008536 PMCID: PMC4805252 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram for the selection of studies.
Characteristics of the studies included in the review.
| Reference | Publication year | Country | Area | Study site | Study type | Study period | Sampling | Sample size | Response rate (%) | Mean age (years) | Selection criteria | Quality grade | Precision (margin of error) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samaras, et al [ | 2007 | USA, Europe, Australia, Asia, South America | National | Hospital + community | C/C | Not provided | Unspecified | 788 | NR | - | Age ≥ 17 years; not diagnosed with AIDS | Low | 0.03 |
| Wand, et al [ | 2007 | Australia, Brazil, Canada, New Zealand, 17 Europrean countries | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 1999–2002 | Random | 881 | 94 | 38.7 | Adults not receiving ART | Low | 0.02 |
| Worm, et al [ | 2010 | USA, Australia, 21 European countries | National | Hospital (212 clinics) | C/S | 2006–2007 | Not random | 23852 | NR | 38 | Adults on ART and regular follow-up | Low | 0.01 |
| Baum, et al [ | 2006 | USA | National | Community | C/S | 2002–2003 | Unspecified | 118 | NR | 41.7 | Adult chronic drug users | Moderate | 0.06 |
| Jacobson, et al [ | 2006 | USA | Urban | Community | C/S | 2000–2003 | Unspecified | 477 | NR | - | Self-selected | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Johnsen, et al [ | 2006 | USA | National | Hospital | C/C | 2002–2003 | Unspecified | 97 | NR | 41 | Women with BMI≥20 kg/m2 and only on ART chronic medications | Moderate | 0.09 |
| Mondy, et al [ | 2007 | USA | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2005 | Not random | 471 | 78 | - | All clinic attendees during the study period | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Adeyemi, et al [ | 2008 | USA | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2005–2006 | Unspecified | 121 | NR | 54 | Age ≥ 50 years; outpatient | Moderate | 0.09 |
| Sobieszczyk, et al [ | 2008 | USA | Urban | Hospital + community | C/S | 2000–2004 | Unspecified | 1725 | NR | 40 | Women | Low | 0.02 |
| Sterling, et al [ | 2008 | USA | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 1998–2006 | Unspecified | 222 | 82 | 45.4 | Adults co-infected with HCV | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Ances, et al [ | 2009 | USA | National | Hospital | C/C | Not provided | Unspecified | 66 | NR | 41 | Cryptogenic stroke (case subgroup) | Moderate | 0.09 |
| Pullinger, et al [ | 2010 | USA | Urban | Community | C/S | 2005–2007 | Unspecified | 296 | 84.6 | 45.3 | Age ≥ 18 years; diagnosed duration ≥3 months | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Krishnan, et al [ | 2012 | USA | National | Hospital | C/S | 2001–2007 | random | 2247 | 88 | - | Age ≥13 years | Low | 0.02 |
| Hadigan, et al [ | 2013 | USA | Urban | Hospital (2 clinics) | C/S | 2007–2011 | Not random | 182 | 72 | 45 | Absence of chronic NCDs or co-infection | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Tiozzo, et al [ | 2015 | USA | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2013 | Not random | 89 | 90 | 48 | Age ≥18 years on ART | Moderate | 0.1 |
| Da Silva, et al [ | 2009 | Brazil | Urban | Hospital (7 centres) | C/S | 2004–2006 | Not random | 319 | NR | 39.5 | ART use ≥ 2 months, and no anti- lipid agents | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Cahn, et al [ | 2010 | 7 Latin American countries | National | Hospital (61 centres) | C/S | 2006–2007 | Unspecified | 4010 | NR | 41.9 | ART use ≥1 month | Moderate | 0.01 |
| Leite, et al [ | 2010 | Brazil | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2008 | Unspecified | 100 | NR | - | - | Moderate | 0.1 |
| Ramirez-Marrero, et al [ | 2010 | Puerto Rico | Urban | Hospital + community | C/S | 2003–2007 | Random | 897 | 31.2 | 44.7 | - | Low | 0.03 |
| Lauda, et al [ | 2011 | Brazil | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2007–2008 | Unspecified | 249 | NR | - | Age ≥18 years | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Alencastro, et al [ | 2012 | Brazil | Urban | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Not random | 1240 | 96 | 38.6 | Age 18–79 years | Low | 0.02 |
| Gasparotto, et al [ | 2012 | Brazil | National | Hospital (multiple-centres) | C/S | Not provided | Unspecified | 614 | NR | 42.6 | Age ≥18 years; ART use ≥1 year; viral load ≤50 copies/ml | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Signorini, et al [ | 2012 | Brazil | National | Hospital | C/S | 2005 | Unspecified | 819 | NR | 41 | Age ≥18 years | Low | 0.03 |
| NR | |||||||||||||
| Gazzaruso, et al [ | 2003 | Italy | National | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Unspecified | 287 | NR | 41 | ART use | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Jerico, et al [ | 2005 | Spain | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2003 | Unspecified | 710 | 88 | 41.9 | Age ≥20 years; no evidence of AIDS or ART disruption | Low | 0.03 |
| Bergersen, et al [ | 2006 | Norway | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2000–2001 | Not random | 263 | 78 | 43.3 | - | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Estrada, et al [ | 2006 | Spain | National | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Not random | 146 | NR | 40.6 | ART use ≥6 months, no active opportunistic affection | Moderate | 0.06 |
| Bonfanti, et al [ | 2007 | Italy | Urban | Hospital (18 centers) | C/S | 2005 | Not random | 1243 | 98.4 | 43.2 | - | Moderate | 0.02 |
| Palacios, et al [ | 2007 | Spain | National | Hospital | C/S | 2002–2003 | Unspecified | 60 | 81 | 40.9 | ART use ≥48 weeks | Moderate | 0.09 |
| Badiou, et al [ | 2008 | France | National | Hospital | C/S | 1999 | Not random | 232 | NR | 41 | - | Low | 0.04 |
| Martin, et al (SHIVA study) [ | 2008 | France | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2003 | Unspecified | 140 | 86.9 | - | - | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Schillaci, et al [ | 2008 | Italy | Urban | Hospital | C/C | Not provided | Unspecified | 39 | NR | 37 | Outpatients; no ART | Moderate | 0.12 |
| Hansen, et al [ | 2009 | Denmark | National | Hospital | C/S | 2004–2006 | Unspecified | 566 | 75.7 | 44.1 | Age ≥18 years | Low | 0.04 |
| Young, et al [ | 2009 | Switzerland | National | Hospital | C/S | 2000–2006 | Unspecified | 1644 | 70 | - | ART use | Low | 0.02 |
| Bonfanti, et al [ | 2010 | Italy | Urban | Hospital (14 centers) | C/S | 2007 | Not random | 292 | NR | 37 | Age ≥18 years; ART naive | Moderate | 0.04 |
| Calza, et al [ | 2011 | Italy | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2009 | Not random | 755 | NR | 37 | Outpatients | Moderate | 0.02 |
| Cubero, et al [ | 2011 | Spain | National | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Not random | 159 | NR | 39 | 1st line ART regimen, no kidney or liver disease, no lipid modifying treatment or hormone use | Moderate | 0.07 |
| Elgalib, et al [ | 2011 | UK | Urban; Peri-urban | Hospital (2 centers) | C/S | 2005–2006 | Random | 678 | 66.4 | 39.5 | - | Low | 0.03 |
| Freitas, et al [ | 2011 | Portugal | National | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Unspecified | 345 | NR | 43.8 | ART use lipodystrophy | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Guaraldi, et al [ | 2011 | Italy | National | Hospital (2 centers) | C/S | 2007–2008 | Unspecified | 103 | NR | 46.9 | Age ≥18 years on ART | Moderate | 0.06 |
| Janiszewski et al [ | 2011 | Italy | National | Hospital | C/S | 2005–2009 | Unspecified | 2322 | NR | - | ART use ≥ 18 months | Moderate | 0.02 |
| Biron, et al [ | 2012 | France | National | Hospital (5 centers) | C/S | 2000–2007 | Not random | 269 | 85.7 | 43 | Aged ≥18 years, ART use for 1–4 years without disruption | Low | 0.05 |
| Guaraldi, et al [ | 2012 | Italy | National | Hospital (2 centers) | C/S | 2009–2010 | Unspecified | 133 | NR | - | Men, sexually active in the 4 last weeks | Moderate | 0.07 |
| Maloberti, et al [ | 2013 | Italy | National | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Unspecified | 108 | NR | - | Free of known CVD risk factors | Moderate | 0.07 |
| De Socio, et al (HIV-Hy study) [ | 2014 | Italy | National | Hospital | C/S | 2010–2011 | Not random | 765 | 93 | 45.6 | - | Moderate | 0.03 |
| Sawadogo, et al [ | 2014 | Burkina Faso | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2011 | Random | 400 | NR | 41.4 | Age ≥18 years; ART use ≥ 6 months | Moderate | 0.03 |
| Zannou, et al [ | 2009 | Benin | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2004–2005 | Unspecified | 79 | 90 | 38 | Age ≥ 16 years; ART use; not obese | Moderate | 0.07 |
| Awotedu, et al [ | 2010 | South Africa | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2009–2010 | Not random | 196 | NR | 36.8 | No lipid modifying medications | Moderate | 0.07 |
| Fourie, et al [ | 2010 | South Africa | Urban; Rural | Community | C/S | 2005 | Random | 300 | NR | 44 | Aged ≥35 years; no chronic medications or self-reported disease | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Ayodele, et al [ | 2012 | Nigeria | Urban | Hospital | C/S | Not provided | Not random | 291 | 94 | 39.5 | No liver or thyroid disease or concurrent infections | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Berhane, et al [ | 2012 | Ethiopia | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2010 | Not random | 313 | 100 | - | Age ≥18 years, ART use ≥6 weeks | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Muhammad, et al [ | 2013 | Nigeria | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2009 | Not random | 200 | NR | 32.5 | Age ≥18 years; not diagnosed with hypertension, diabetes or dyslipidaemia before commencing ART | Moderate | 0.05 |
| Ngatchou, et al [ | 2013 | Cameroon | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2009–2010 | Not random | 108 | NR | 39 | ART-naïve adults; no documented diabetes, hypertension or dyslipidaemia | Moderate | 0.09 |
| Mbunkah, et al [ | 2014 | Cameroon | National | Hospital | C/S | 2010–2011 | Unspecified | 173 | 100 | 38.7 | - | Low | 0.05 |
| Tesfaye, et al [ | 2014 | Ethiopia | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2013 | Random | 374 | 97.2 | 32.6 | Age ≥18 years | Low | 0.04 |
| Gupta, et al [ | 2011 | India | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2007–2009 | Not random | 68 | NR | 35.9 | ART-naïve; no chronic medications | Moderate | 0.1 |
| Wu, et al [ | 2012 | Taiwan | National | Hospital | C/S | 2008–2009 | Unspecified | 803 | 60.2 | - | Age ≥18 years | Low | 0.03 |
| Bajaj, et al [ | 2013 | India | Urban | Hospital | C/S | 2010–2011 | Not random | 70 | NR | - | No comorbid diabetes or hypertension | Moderate | 0.09 |
| Jantarapakde, et al [ | 2014 | Thailand | National | Hospital (6 centres) | C/S | 2009–2011 | Unspecified | 580 | 99 | 37 | Adults | Low | 0.03 |
BMI, body mass index; C/C, case-control; C/S, cross-sectional; HCV, hepatitis C virus; NCDs, non-communicable diseases; NR, not reported.
*Quality grades: Low risk (score range, 7–9), Moderate risk (score range, 4–6), and High risk (score range, 0–3).
Fig 2Overall metabolic syndrome prevalence in the HIV-infected: Adult Treatment Panel III (ATPIII) 2001 criteria.
For each study the black box represents the study estimate (prevalence of metabolic syndrome [MS]) and the horizontal bar about the 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). The size of the boxes is proportional to the inverse variance. The diamond at the lower tail of the figure is for the pooled effect estimates from random effects models. The proportional contribution of each study (weight) to the pooled estimates is also shown, together with the prevalence estimates and measures of heterogeneity. The dotted vertical line is centred on the pooled estimates.
Fig 3Overall metabolic syndrome prevalence in the HIV-infected.
Figure panels are for the prevalence of metabolic syndrome according to the International Diabetes Federation 2005 criteria (panel a), and according to the Adult Treatment Panel III 2005 criteria overall and by continent (panel b). For each study the black box represents the study estimate (prevalence of metabolic syndrome [MS]) and the horizontal bar about the 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). The size of the boxes is proportional to the inverse variance. The diamond at the lower tail of the figure is for the pooled effect estimates from random effects models. The proportional contribution of each study (weight) to the pooled estimates is also shown, together with the prevalence estimates and measures of heterogeneity. The dotted vertical line is centred on the pooled estimates.
Fig 4Funnel plots for included studies across different diagnostic criteria for metabolic syndrome.
For each diagnostic criteria, the arcsine transformed proportion of participants with metabolic syndrome (relative to the total sample) for each relevant study (horizontal axis) is plotted against its standard error (vertical axis), and represented by the dots. When the dots distribute symmetrically in a funnel shape, this implies an absence of bias. A p-value <0.05 (Egger test) indicates significant publication bias.
Fig 5Pooled metabolic syndrome prevalence in the HIV-infected presented by gender: International Diabetes Federation 2005 criteria.
For each study the black box represents the study estimate (prevalence of metabolic syndrome [MS]) and the horizontal bar about the 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). The size of the boxes is proportional to the inverse variance. The diamond at the lower tail of the figure is for the pooled effect estimates from random effects models. The proportional contribution of each study (weight) to the pooled estimates is also shown, together with the prevalence estimates and measures of heterogeneity. The dotted vertical line is centred on the pooled estimates. Furthermore, pooled effect estimates are provided separately by gender. The horizontal arrow head indicates that the representation of the effect estimates and 95% confidence intervals has been truncated.
Fig 6Pooled metabolic syndrome prevalence in the HIV-infected presented by antiretroviral therapy (ART) use: Adult Treatment Panel 2001 criteria.
For each study the black box represents the study estimate (prevalence of metabolic syndrome [MS]) and the horizontal bar about the 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). The size of the boxes is proportional to the inverse variance. The diamond at the lower tail of the figure is for the pooled effect estimates from random effects models. The proportional contribution of each study (weight) to the pooled estimates is also shown, together with the prevalence estimates and measures of heterogeneity. The dotted vertical line is centred on the pooled estimates. Furthermore, pooled effect estimates are provided separately by ART use. The horizontal arrow head indicates that the representation of the effect estimates and 95% confidence intervals has been truncated.