| Literature DB >> 31218522 |
Leah H Rubin1,2,3, Deanna Saylor4, Gertrude Nakigozi5, Noeline Nakasujja6, Kevin Robertson7, Alice Kisakye5, James Batte5, Richard Mayanja5, Aggrey Anok5, Sarah M Lofgren8, David R Boulware8, Raha Dastgheyb4, Steven J Reynolds9,10, Thomas C Quinn9,10, Ronald H Gray11, Maria J Wawer11, Ned Sacktor4.
Abstract
Considerable heterogeneity exists in patterns of neurocognitive change in people with HIV (PWH). We examined heterogeneity in neurocognitive change trajectories from HIV diagnosis to 1-2 years post-antiretroviral therapy (ART). In an observational cohort study in Rakai, Uganda, 312 PWH completed a neuropsychological (NP) test battery at two-time points (ART-naïve, 1-2 years post-ART initiation). All NP outcomes were used in a latent profile analysis to identify subgroups of PWH with similar ART-related neurocognitive change profiles. In a subset, we examined subgroup differences pre-ART on cytokine and neurodegenerative biomarkers CSF levels. We identified four ART-related change subgroups: (1) decline-only (learning, memory, fluency, processing speed, and attention measures), (2) mixed (improvements in learning and memory but declines in attention and executive function measures), (3) no-change, or (4) improvement-only (learning, memory, and attention measures). ART-related NP outcomes that are most likely to change included learning, memory, and attention. Motor function measures were unchanged. Subgroups differed on eight of 34 pre-ART biomarker levels including interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, IL-13, interferon-γ, macrophage inflammatory protein-1β, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-3, MMP-10, and platelet-derived growth factor-AA. The improvement-only and mixed subgroups showed lower levels on these markers versus the no-change subgroup. These findings provide support for the need to disentangle heterogeneity in ART-related neurocognitive changes, to focus on higher-order cognitive processes (learning, memory, attention) as they were most malleable to change, and to better understand why motor function remained unchanged despite ART treatment. Group differences in pre-ART CSF levels provide preliminary evidence of biological plausibility of neurocognitive phenotyping.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive impairment; Global health; HIV
Year: 2019 PMID: 31218522 PMCID: PMC7296988 DOI: 10.1007/s13365-019-00768-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurovirol ISSN: 1355-0284 Impact factor: 2.643