| Literature DB >> 33803504 |
Emmanuel Peprah1, Mari Armstrong-Hough1, Stephanie H Cook1, Barbara Mukasa2, Jacquelyn Y Taylor3, Huichun Xu4, Linda Chang5, Joyce Gyamfi1, Nessa Ryan1, Temitope Ojo1, Anya Snyder1, Juliet Iwelunmor6, Oliver Ezechi7, Conrad Iyegbe8, Paul O'Reilly8, Andre Pascal Kengne8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African countries have the highest number of people living with HIV (PWH). The continent is home to 12% of the global population, but accounts for 71% of PWH globally. Antiretroviral therapy has played an important role in the reduction of the morbidity and mortality rates for HIV, which necessitates increased surveillance of the threats from pernicious risks to which PWH who live longer remain exposed. This includes cardiopulmonary comorbidities, which pose significant public health and economic challenges. A significant contributor to the cardiopulmonary comorbidities is tobacco smoking. Indeed, globally, PWH have a 2-4-fold higher utilization of tobacco compared to the general population, leading to endothelial dysfunction and atherogenesis that result in cardiopulmonary diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and coronary artery disease. In the context of PWH, we discuss (1) the current trends in cigarette smoking and (2) the lack of geographically relevant data on the cardiopulmonary conditions associated with smoking; we then review (3) the current evidence on chronic inflammation induced by smoking and the potential pathways for cardiopulmonary disease and (4) the multifactorial nature of the syndemic of smoking, HIV, and cardiopulmonary diseases. This commentary calls for a major, multi-setting cohort study using a syndemics framework to assess cardiopulmonary disease outcomes among PWH who smoke.Entities:
Keywords: HIV/AIDS; cardiovascular disease; low- and middle-income countries; smoking; syndemics; tobacco
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803504 PMCID: PMC8003038 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18063111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Prevalence data for PWH, smoking, and the general adult populations.
| Country | Official Population [ | PWH [ | Smoking Prevalence among Adults (Non-PWH) | Smoking Prevalence among PWH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nigeria | 214 million | 1.9 million | 10.40% [ | 22.10% [ |
| South Africa | 56.5 million | 7.7 million | 17.60% [ | 24.88% [ |
| Uganda | 43.3 million | 1.4 million | 7.40% [ | 10.00% [ |
PWH = people living with HIV/AIDS.
Prevalence data for cardiopulmonary disease, including coronary artery disease (CAD), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and hypertension (HTN), among the general population and PWH (non-smokers) in Nigeria, South Africa, and Uganda.
| Country | CAD Prevalence among Adults (Non-PWH) | CAD Prevalence PWH | COPD Prevalence among Adults (Non-PWH) | COPD Prevalence PWH | HTN Prevalence among Adults (Non-PWH) | HTN Prevalence PWH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nigeria | 1.6% to 3.4% [ | NA | 7.70% [ | 22.19% to 15.4% [ | 28.90% [ | 46.0% [ |
| South Africa | 11% [ | NA | 16.7% to 22.20% [ | 8.00% to 9.8% [ | >40% [ | 38.6% [ |
| Uganda | 4.02% [ | NA | 6.20% [ | 3.7% to 10.4% [ | 26.40% [ | 10% to 11% [ |
PWH = people living with HIV/AIDS.
Figure 1This figure illustrates the syndemic structure of PWH exposures and health outcomes, which needs consideration in addressing comorbid conditions in PWH. It is paramount to have a multilevel approach—a “syndemic framework—that can simultaneously address the medical provider (blue), structural/non-medical (green), and medical (yellow, red, and purple) elements. This syndemic framework illustrates that various causal relationships cannot be disentangled from each element individually because it will require a holistic approach to impact PWH outcomes. NB, this figure was adapted from Sampson et al. [101].