| Literature DB >> 28793863 |
Paolo Maggi1, Antonio Di Biagio2, Stefano Rusconi3, Stefania Cicalini4, Maurizio D'Abbraccio5, Gabriella d'Ettorre6, Canio Martinelli7, Giuseppe Nunnari8, Laura Sighinolfi9, Vincenzo Spagnuolo10, Nicola Squillace11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Aim of this review is to focus the attention on people living with HIV infection at risk of developing a cardiovascular event. What is or what would be the most suitable antiretroviral therapy? Which statin or fibrate to reduce the risk? How to influence behavior and lifestyles? DISCUSSION: Prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk remains the first and essential step in a medical intervention on these patients. The lifestyle modification, including smoking cessation, increased physical activity, weight reduction, and the education on healthy dietary practices are the main instruments. Statins are the cornerstone for the treatment of hypercholesterolemia. They have been shown to slow the progression or promote regression of coronary plaque, and could also exert an anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effect. However the current guidelines for the use of these drugs in general population are dissimilar, with important differences between American and European ones. The debate between American and European guidelines is still open and, also considering the independent risk factor represented by HIV, specific guidelines are warranted. Ezetimibe reduces the intestinal absorption of cholesterol. It is effective alone or in combination with rosuvastatin. It does not modify plasmatic concentrations of antiretrovirals. A number of experimental new classes of drugs for the treatment of hypercholesterolemia are being studied. Fibrates represent the first choice for treatment of hypertriglyceridemia, however, the renal toxicity of fibrates and statins should be considered. Omega 3 fatty acids have a good safety profile, but their efficacy is limited. Another concern is the high dose needed. Other drugs are acipimox and tesamorelin. Current antiretroviral therapies are less toxic and more effective than regimens used in the early years. Lipodistrophy and dyslipidemia are the main causes of long-term toxicities. Not all antiretrovirals have similar toxicities. Protease Inhibitors may cause dyslipidemia and lipodystrophy, while integrase inhibitors have a minimal impact on lipids profile, and no evidence of lipodystrophy. There is still much to be written with the introduction of new drugs in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular risk; Dyslipidemia; Ezetimibe; Fibrates; HIV; Lipodystrophy; Omega 3 fatty acids ART; Statins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28793863 PMCID: PMC5550957 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2626-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Main recommendations of the Mediterranean diet [127–131]
| Increase the consumption of fresh fruit and vegetables of all kinds |
| Increase the consumption of legumes such as beans, peas, chickpeas and lentils |
| Eat fish two or three times a week |
| Encourage the use of extra-virgin olive oil and sunflower and maize oils |
| Limit the consumption of animal saturated fat acids such as butter, lard and cream |
Switch studies reporting the influence of therapy modification on biomarkers of cardiovascular disease
| Study Acronym | Study Design | Enrolled patients | Markers evaluated | time endpoint evauation | Laboratory markers change | reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| STRATEGY- | Randomized, open label switch study looking at the non inferiority of switching patients who were virologically suppressed on an NNRTI based regimen to co-formulated elvitegravir | 439 patients. 266 out of 291 participants randomized to the switch group completed the study. 119 out of 143 participants assigned to the no-switch group completed the study | Fasting serum cholesterol; fasting serum HDL-C; fasting serum LDL-C; fasting serum triglyceride; CD4 cell count; HIV RNA; | 48 | At week 48 93% of participants in the switch group and 88% in the no-switch group maintained plasma viral load <50 copies/ml. No emergent resistances were observed among the two groups. Starting at week 4 increases of serum creatinine were observed among the switch group; increase was stable and non progressive through week 48. A small decrease in HDL-C was observed in the switch group. | [ |
| STRATEGY PI | Multicenter randomised open-label trial investigating the non inferiority of switching to co-formuated elvitegravir in patients virologically suppressed on a PI based regimen | 433 patients. 293 were included in the group switching to co-formulated elvitegravir and 140 remained on their existing regimen | Fasting serum COL; fasting serum HDL-C; fasting serum LDL-C; fasting serum TG; CD4 cell count; HIV RNA; | 48 | At week 48 3.8% of patients enrolled in the switch arm abd 87.1% of participants in the no-switch arm maintained a plasma HIV RNA <50 copies/ml. Starting at week 4 a stable non progressive increase in serum creatinine occurred among switch arm participants. A decrease in serum triglycerides was observed in the switch group. | [ |
| SPIRAL Substudy | Changes in cardiovascular biomarkers in HIV-infectedpatients switching from ritonavir-boosted proteaseinhibitors to raltegravir | Of 273 patients initiating study drugs in the SPIRAL trial, 233 (119 RAL, 114 PI/r) remained on allocated therapy for 48 weeks and had sera available for the purpose of this substudy | hsCRP MCP-1 OPG IL-6 IL-10 TNF-a ICAM-1 VCAM-1 Selectin E Selectin P Adiponectin Insulin D-dimer | 48 | hsCRP (40%, | [ |
| SPIRAL Substudy LDL | LDL subclasses and lipoprotein-phospholipase A2 activity in suppressed HIV-infected patients switching to raltegravir | 81 (41 PI/r and 40 raltegravir) patients were evaluated | Total cholesterol, LDL-c, HDL-c,Triglycerides, TC/HDL-c,Non-HDL-c, Apo A-I, Apo B, ApoA-I/Apo B Lipoprotein PCSK9,LDL size, Cholesterol content in sdLDLLDL phenotype A, LDL phenotype intermediate, LDL phenotype B, Lp-PLA2 Total LDL-Lp-PLA2 Total HDL-Lp-PLA2 8 (4; 14.9) 8.7 (5.4; 17.2) 0.829Insulin, C-Peptide, HOMA index | 48 | TC, LDL-c, non-HDL-c, TC/HDL, triglyceride, Apo B, Apo A-I and Lp (a) decreased in raltegravir arm compared to PI/r arm. A shift from LDL phenotype B to the less atherogenic phenotype A was observed only in raltegravir arm. | [ |
| SPIRAL-LIP substudy | To compare 48-week changes in body fat distribution and bone mineral density (BMD) - using Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and computed tomography scans - between patients switching from a ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor (PI/r) to raltegravir (RAL) and patients continuing with PI/r. | 86 patients were included and 74 patients (39 RAL, 35 PI/r) completed the substudy. |
| 48 | Significant increases in median VAT and TAT were seen within the PI/r group.No significant changes in body fat were seen with RAL or between treatment groups. | [ |
| ANRS 138 Substudy | To compare the effect of randomly switching virologically suppressed, treatment-experienced patient from enfuvirtide to raltegravir on biomarker levels | 164 participants in the ANRS138 trial | IL-6 hsCRP Level D-dimer | 24, 48 | At week 24, a significant decrease from baseline was observed in the IS arm, compared with the DS arm, for IL-6 level (−30% vs +10%; | [ |
| na | We retrospectively identified from our electronic database all patients with HIV RNA < 50 copies/ml for >6 months on an NVP-containing regimen and no prior exposure to integrase strand transfer inhibitors who were switched to RAL plus NVP. | 39 patients | Total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol,LDL-cholesterol,Total cholesterol/HDL ratio,triglycerides | 24, 48, 72 | Median changes in serum lipids showed significant improvement at M6 for all paremeters except low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol in the whole population but lipid improvement was greater in the PI/r group | [ |
| na | multi-centric retrospective study was conducted including HIV-1-positive patients on raltegravir/nevirapinedual regimens | 77 patients switching from successful regimens | routine biochemical tests | 48,96 | In patients switching with lipid abnormalities [ | [ |
| STRIIVING | randomized open label,non inferiority trial | 551 patients on aintegrase inhibitors pr protease inhibitor or nonucleoside reverse trascriptase inhibitor regimens with HIV-RNA < 50 copie/mL were included | TC, HDL-C, LDL C, TG,TC/ratio; hs-PCR,sCD1s,sCD163, IL-6, D-dimer, sVCAM, I-FABP | 24 | Significant declines of the levels of I-FABP and sCD14 was observed at 24 weeks | [ |
Trials on the therapeutic switch to a NNRTI-containing regimen
| Study Acronym | Study Design and Enrolled Patients | Markers evaluated | time endpoint evauation | Laboratory markers change | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LIPNEFA | A subset (n. 90) of virologically suppressed HIV-infected patients enrolled in the NEFA study [ | HDL-C and LDL-C levels | 24 | At 24 months, efavirenz (EFV) and nevirapine (NVP) produced similar lipid benefits: HDL-C levels increased [EFV, 15% ( | [ |
| SPIRIT | Virologically suppressed HIV-infected adults who were receiving a PI-based HAART were switched to emtricitabine-rilpivirine-tenofovir difumarate (FTC-RPV-TDF). | TC, LDL-C, TGL, and TC:HDL-C ratio. | 24 | At 24 weeks, levels of TC, LDL-C, TGL, and the TC:HDL-C ratio had improved significantly in patients switched to FTC-RPV-TDF compared to those patients who kept their original PI-based treatment ( | [ |
| Study 111 | Virologically suppressed patients who were switched from EFV-TDF- FTC to RPV-TDF-FTC. | Fasting TC, LDL-C, HDL-C, TGL, and TC:HDL-C ratio. | 12, 48 | A significative decline in fasting TC, LDL-C and TGL at 12 weeks into the protocol. Results at week 48 remained in the same direction ( | [ |
| Etraswitch | The switch from a PI-containing regimen to etravirine (ETR) in patients with therapeutic success. | Glycemia, fasting TC, LDL-C, HDL-C, TGL, and TC:HDL-C ratio. | 24 | The group of patients who received ETR showed a significant reduction in TC ( | [ |
| na | A prospective, open-label, 12-week study of HIV-infected patients receiving either a on bPI or EFV, and statin treatment. Four weeks after statin interruption, bPI or EFV was switched to ETR (400 mg for 8 weeks) if serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) was ≥3 mM. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients not qualifying for statin treatment 8 weeks after the ETR switch. | Fasting TC, LDL-C, HDL-C, TGL, and TC:HDL-C ratio. | 12 | After 8 weeks of ETR treatment, 15 patients (56%) on ETR did not qualify for statin treatment. After the ETR switch, serum levels of the cardiovascular biomarkers sICAM and MCP1/CCL2 decreased by 11.2% and 18.9%, respectively, and those of CCL5/RANTES and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 increased by 14.3% and 13.4%, respectively, indicating reduced cardiovascular risk. | [ |
Effects of statin therapy on the progression of atherosclerosis in HIV- and non-HIV-infected patients
| Type of study | Method | N°of patients | Effect of statin therapy | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meta-analysis | Coronary VH-IVUS | 830 non HIV-infected patients | Reduction of plaque volume | [ |
| Randomized double-blind, placebo controlled trial | FDG-PET of the aorta | 40 HIV-infected patients | Reduction of plaque volume and high-risk plaque morphology over 52 weeks | [ |
| Randomized double-blind, placebo controlled trial | Common carotid artery IMT | 147 HIV-infected patients on stable ART | Less progression of CCA IMT over 96 weeks | [ |
VH-IVUS, virtual histology intravascular ultrasound; FDG-PET, Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography; IMT, intima media thickness; ART, antiretroviral therapy; CCA, common carotid artery
The 2013 ACC/AHA guideline statin benefit group
| 1) Patients | |
| 2) Patients without clinical atherosclerotic CVD, | |
| 3) Patients aged 40–75 years, | |
| 4) Patients without clinical atherosclerotic CVD or diabetes, aged 40–75 years, with LDL-C < 190 mg/dl, and |
CVD, cardiovascular disease; CV, cardiovascular
aincluding acute coronary syndrome, myocardial infarction, angina, revascularization, transient ischemic attack, stroke, peripheral arterial disease
bcalculated using the 2013 ACC/AHA risk assessment tool
The ACC/AHA guideline statin dose classification
| Reduction of LDL-C level | ||||
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| Atorvastatin 20–40 mg | |||
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| Atorvastatin 10–20 mg | |||
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| Simvastatin 10 mg | |||
LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol
Efficacy and safety of evolocumab and alirocumab in different studies performed in the general population
| Study Design | Enrolled patients | Efficacy results | Safety results | reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meta-analysis on Phase 2 or 3 randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) comparing treatment using PCSK9 antibodies with no anti-PCSK9 therapy in adults with hypercholesterolemia. | Twenty-four RCTs comprising 10,159 patients were included. | Treatment with PCSK9 antibodies led to marked reductions in LDL-C (mean difference, −47.49% [95% CI, −9.64% to −25.35%]; | The overall incidence of serious adverse events was 9.26% (573 of 6187) among patients treated with PCSK9 antibodies and 7.73% (307 of 3972) among patients who were not treated with PCSK9 antibodies (OR, 1.01 [CI, 0.87 to 1.18]; | [ |
| Meta-analysis to evaluate the safety and efficacy of anti-PCSK9 antibodies in randomized, controlled trials (RCTs). | Twenty-five RCTs encompassing 12,200 patients were included | Evolocumab treatment significantly reduced LDL-C by −54.6% and by absolute −78.9 mg/dl versus placebo, and by −36.3% versus ezetimibe. | Alirocumab was associated with | [ |
| ODYSSEY FH I and II: | ODYSSEY FH I, | Mean LDL-C levels decreased from 3.7 mmol/L (144.7 mg/dL) at baseline to 1.8 mmol/L (71.3 mg/dL; 257.9% vs. placebo) at Week 24 in patients randomized to alirocumab in FH I and from 3.5 mmol/L (134.6 mg/dL) to 1.8 mmol/L (67.7 mg/dL; 251.4% vs. placebo) in FH II (P, 0.0001). | Adverse events resulted in discontinuation in 3.4% of alirocumab-treated patients in FH I (vs. 6.1% placebo) and 3.6% (vs. 1.2%) in FH II. Rate of injection site reactions in alirocumab-treated patients was 12.4% in FH I and 11.4% in FH II (vs. 11.0 and 7.4% with placebo). | [ |
| TESLA Part B: | 50 eligible patients | Compared with placebo, evolocumab significantly reduced LDL cholesterol at 12 weeks by 30·9% (95% CI −43·9% to −18·0%; | Treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in ten (63%) of 16 patients in the placebo group and 12 (36%) of 33 in the evolocumab group. | [ |
| ODYSSEY LONG TERM: | 2341 patients at high risk for cardiovascular | At week 24, the difference between the alirocumab and placebo groups in the mean percentage change from baseline in calculated LDL cholesterol level was −62% ( | The alirocumab group, as compared with the placebo group, had higher rates of injection-site reactions (5.9% vs. 4.2%), myalgia (5.4% vs. 2.9%), neurocognitive events (1.2% vs. 0.5%), and ophthalmologic events (2.9% vs. 1.9%). | [ |
| The GAUSS-2 trial: | 307 patients | At week 12, evolocumab reduced LDL-C from baseline by 53% to 56%, corresponding to treatment differences versus ezetimibe of 37% to 39% ( | Muscle adverse events occurred in 12% of evolocumab-treated patients and 23% of ezetimibe-treated patients. Treatment-emergent adverse events and laboratory abnormalities were comparable across treatment groups. | [ |
| OSLER Study: | 4465 eligible patients randomly assigned | As compared with standard therapy alone, evolocumab reduced the level of LDL-C by 61%, from a median of 120 mg per deciliter to 48 mg per deciliter ( | Neurocognitive events were reported more frequently in the evolocumab | [ |
| FOURIER study: | 27,564 patients were randomly assigned to receive evolocumab or matching placebo as subcutaneous injections | At 48 weeks, mean percentage reduction in LDL cholesterol levels with evolocumab, as compared with placebo, was 59% ( | No significant difference between the study groups with regard to adverse events (including new-onset diabetes and neurocognitive events), with the exception of injection-site reactions, which were more common with evolocumab (2.1% vs. 1.6%). | [ |
studies evaluating fibrates and fish oil in mixed dyslipidemia and isolated trigliceridemia
| Drugs | Sample size | Study Design | Reduction of TRG (±SD or IQR) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FO vs Fenofibrate vs Gemfibrozil vs Atorvastatin | 76 vs 80 vs 46 vs 291 (HIV-infected). | Observational/ quasi-experimental pre/post design. | FO: −45 mg/dl (−80 to −11) | [ |
| Fenofibrate | 55 with Lipodystrophy with severe Hypertriglyceridemia (TRG > 500 mg/dl) [HIV-POS] | Observational/Prospective | Mean change:-335 mg/dl | [ |
| FO vs Fenofibrate vs FO + Fenofibrate | 50 vs 50, if no response at week 10 switch to combination therapy; 72 pts. switched. (HIV-infected) | Randomized-Open label | FO = 46% vs Fenofibrate (58%) vs FO + Fenofibrate (65%) | [ |
| Fenofibrate vs pravastatin vs Fenofibrate + pravastatin | 88 vs 86, if no response at week 12 switch to combination therapy (most patients switched) [HIV-infected] | Randomized-Open label | Median change: −144 mg/dl (−1492 to 927 fenofibrate) vs −66 (−899 to 1567 prevastatin) | [ |
| FO | 41 (HIV-infected) | Randomized-Open label | Mean change: 63.2 ± 86.9 mg/dl mg/dl | [ |
| FO | 48 (HIV-infected) | Randomized-placebo-controlled | Median decrease: −34 (−149–9.5) mg/dL | [ |
| FO + simvastatin | 254 (uninfected) | Randomized-Open label | Mean change: 29% (FO + simvastatin) vs 6% (simvastatin) | [ |
| FO + simvastatin | 59 with Coronary heart disease already on simvastatin (uninfected) | Randomized, Study duration: 24 weeks + 24 weeks | Mean change: 20–30% | [ |
TRG, Triglycerides; FO, Fish Oil; SD, standard deviation; IQR, interquartile range; pts., patients