As treatments for patients living with HIV (PLWH) increase in number and in efficacy, there is a growing population of individuals successfully managing their condition and increasing their life expectancy. However, these increased lifespans mean dealing with numerous clinical challenges, including—but not limited to—the risks posed by weight gain, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and viral hepatitis, according to experts presenting during a session at the 13th International AIDS Society (IAS) Conference on HIV Session in Nairobi, Kenya, which took place from July 13 to July 17.1
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Experts presenting during the session included Nomathemba Chandiwana, BSc, MBBCh, MPH, chief scientific officer at the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation; Franck Boccara, MD, PhD, professor of cardiology at Sorbonne Universite, France and member of the cardiology department at Saint Antoine University Hospital, Paris; Estevao Portela Nunes, National Institute of Infectious Diseases – Evandro Chagas; and Pui Li Wong, MBChB, MRCP, infectious disease clinician and lecturer at Universiti Malaya, Malaysia.1
The panel of presenters each tackled a different clinical consideration for PLWH, discussing weight management, cardiovascular risk, considerations for viral hepatitis spread, and aspects of healthy aging, respectively. Together, these insights provide patients, pharmacists, and other treatment providers valuable guidance for more optimized and targeted management of PLWH impacted by such clinical concerns.1
Modern HIV Therapy is Ubiquitous With Weight Gain
Chandiwana began the session with a discussion on weight management and obesity concerns in PLWH. Across the world rates of obesity are rising, especially in HIV burden settings and in middle-income countries, which often have higher populations of PLWH. Women are at particular risk in regions such as Africa, where women have excess weight or obesity at 3 times the rate of men, according to Chandiwana.1
The prevalence of weight gain in this population is attributed to the use of modern antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV. Despite the major successes of ART, which are medication combinations designed to suppress HIV viral load and preserve CD4 cell counts, multiple studies have found that these therapies heighten rates of weight gain. This is especially the case for patients on integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) or tenofovir alafenamide (TAF).1
Key Takeaways of the Session
- Weight gain and obesity are increasingly common among people living with HIV (PLWH)—particularly women—and are often driven by modern antiretroviral therapies (ART), especially regimens containing INSTIs or TAF. GLP-1 receptor agonists offer a promising management approach.
- Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk remains elevated in PLWH, despite prevention efforts. ART has shifted cardiovascular concerns from HIV-related complications to age-related atherosclerotic events. Women with HIV lose CVD protection earlier, highlighting the need for gender-specific risk counseling and statin use.
- Healthy aging and multimorbidity are critical considerations as PLWH live longer lives. Integrating tools that support cognitive, physical, and social health is essential to ensuring both longevity and quality of life.
Importantly, women living with HIV enter menopause about 5 to 8 years earlier than those not living with HIV, which is crucial for considerations surrounding weight gain in this population. With earlier initiation of menopause, Chandiwana explained that weight gain can be heightened and lead to a greater effect on mobility and activities of daily living.1
“Obesity and overweight is associated with over 200 diseases,” Chandiwana discussed. “What we know is that this is compounded and accelerated in people living with HIV.”1
To help manage obesity and its potential complications, Chandiwana suggested numerous strategies, most prominently, the use of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists to induce weight loss and cardiovascular benefit. Studies have evaluated specific agents, including liraglutide (Saxenda; Novo Nordisk) and semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy; Novo Nordisk) in individuals with HIV and obesity or overweight, and have elicited positive results with promising weight loss. Chandiwana emphasized that strategies with GLP-1s are likely more effective than ART optimization, as most ART regimens induce similar levels of weight gain.1
Ultimately, pharmacists and health care providers must closely monitor PLWH for indications of weight gain, and counsel them on available options, including GLP-1 therapies.1
Prevalent Cardiovascular Risk, Especially for Women
According to Boccara, trends in CVD among PLWH are on the decline over the last 2 decades. Boccara attributes these declines to “the success of cardiovascular prevention,” including efforts regarding tobacco cessation and better diagnosis methods. Still, the risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes in this population are enhanced compared with uninfected patients and continue to evolve compared with past risk descriptions.1
Specifically, Boccara explained that the prevalence of ART has altered the cardiovascular risks often associated with PLWH. Prior to ART’s proliferation, PLWH often faced risks of myocarditis or pericarditis, which could develop to heart failure. Now, most risks are associated with aging and the development of atherosclerotic CVD (ASCVD), characterized by hypertension and/or dyslipidemia. Risks are also varied across income levels, with individuals in high-income countries facing more risks of myocardial infarction and death due to atherosclerosis compared with low- or middle-income countries being burdened with HIV-related cardiomyopathy and coronary artery disease (CAD).1,2
For women, Boccara advocated for greater emphasis on their risk of heart disease, as data indicates they are losing their protection against CVD before the beginning of menopause. In counseling women living with HIV, pharmacists have a responsibility to educate them on their particularly increased CVD risk and steps they can take to reduce their risk.1
These steps can include statins, which are effective at treating dyslipidemia and reducing CVD risk. In one study, Grinspoon et al solidified the efficacy of pitavastatin (Livalo; Kowa Pharmaceuticals) in reducing the risk of a major adverse cardiovascular event in participants with HIV infection compared with placebo. Boccara told the audience that pharmacists and providers should ensure they adhere to guidance on the prescription of statin therapy in primary CVD prevention in PLWH, which often recommend the use of multiple drugs.3
Boccara also touched on the ongoing debate surrounding whether individuals with HIV have higher prevalence of hypertension, which he noted varies worldwide depending on the incidence of obesity, diabetes, or existence of poor social conditions. Regardless of the supposed risk, Boccara endorsed the use of cardiovascular risk scores in PLWH, such as the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation 2 (SCORE2) guidelines in Europe or ASCVD score in the US. He also advocated for the development of risk scores for patients in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia, who are at heightened risk of developing HIV.1
Viral Hepatitis Presents Unique Risk to PLWH
Viral hepatitis—whether in the form of hepatitis C virus (HCV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), or hepatitis delta virus (HDV)—presents a major concern for PLWH, according to Nunes. He explained to the session that the existence of many overlapping modes of transmission makes diagnosis and treatment difficult for patients in this population. Management and diagnosis are especially difficult for key subgroups, including men who have sex with men, prison inmates, and individuals who inject drugs, necessitating targeted support for these demographics.1
Surprisingly—and a helpful development for pharmacists—guideline recommendations support the same strategies for treatment and retreatment of HCV in PLWH and those without HIV. Using the same recommendations for patients without HIV allows for easier coordination of care and more seamless transitions if a patient develops HIV and viral hepatitis and suddenly requires specialized care.1
Improvements in diagnosis are paramount to tackling the overall burden of viral hepatitis. Nunes emphasized that, although cure rates of viral hepatitis are high, reinfection can occur. A systematic review of 41 studies found a significant risk of reinfection in PLWH, especially in men who have sex with men. To better diagnose patients with viral hepatitis and prevent spread, Nunes advocated for “moving to new strategies using tools already available to us, like point-of-care testing.”1
Patients using ART may have enhanced difficulty at achieving a functional cure to viral hepatitis, especially HBV. This is why, according to Nunes, vaccination is critical, especially providing it to nonimmune, non-HBV patients with HIV to prevent infection.1
Healthy Aging is Critical to Ensuring Quality of Life
As previously mentioned, the world’s population is steadily increasing in age. This trend is similar for patients contracting HIV, according to Wong; currently, 40 million individuals live with HIV worldwide, and among these, almost 10 million are aged 50 years or older. Furthermore, by 2030, the proportion of aging among PLWH are set to increase across geographic regions and gender. This reality necessitates an evaluation of the burdens that PLWH may experience as their treatment allows for longer lifespans.1
In 1996—before the widespread use of ART—life expectancy for PLWH was substantially lower compared with the general population. This life expectancy is vastly increased, with the differences between PLWH and the general population significantly reduced; however, as Wong posed to the audience, it remains to be seen if an increase in life expectancy is in conjunction with a positive quality of life for PLWH.1
Wong explained that people aging with HIV can experience accelerated or accentuated aging, which is characterized by differences in chronological versus biological age; increases in multimorbidity, which is the experience of developing 2 or more comorbidities; and increases in the development of geriatric syndromes, including instability, immobility, sarcopenia, and frailty, all of which are more prevalent in PLWH. Continuing a trend observed throughout the session, these risks—especially cognitive impairment and falls—are observed more frequently in women compared with men.1
Buoyed by the concept of “healthy aging”—which the World Health Organization defines as “being able to be and to do what patients have reason to value throughout their lives—Wong advocated for leveraging available tools and using research opportunities to heighten the ability for PLWH to age properly. Specifically, Wong explained the importance of maintaining a patient’s functional ability, which requires reconciling the intrinsic capacity of patients (cognition, mobility, vitality, and psychological concerns) with their external environments (economy, resources, social norms, and values).1
By enabling healthy aging, PLWH will have the opportunity to not only live longer, but live more thoroughly and thoughtfully.1