(Press-News.org) Contact information: Jenny Eriksen Leary
jenny.eriksen@bmc.org
617-638-6841
Boston University Medical Center
BUSM study associates pro-inflammatory molecules with early death in HIV patients
(Boston) – A study led by researchers at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) provides new insight into the impact that pro-inflammatory molecules have on early death in HIV patients who abuse alcohol. The findings, published online in the journal AIDS, pinpoint the inflammatory markers most associated with early death and may help explain why some patients die earlier than others even when all of these patients are on antiretroviral therapy.
Daniel Fuster, MD, PhD, a researcher at the Clinical Addiction Research and Education (CARE) unit at BUSM, is the study's lead author. Unique in its investigation of inflammatory markers in HIV and alcohol abuse, the study is the product of collaboration between Boston University School of Public Health, Boston Medical Center and the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.
Although breakthroughs have been accomplished in HIV antiretroviral therapy, some patients fare better than others. Factors influencing these differences have been identified, including co-infection with hepatitis viruses (especially hepatitis C), substance abuse (alcohol, as well as other drugs), noncompliance with antiviral drugs, CD4+ cell count and HIV viral load. Additionally, researchers have previously identified pro-inflammatory molecules called cytokines that have been associated with elevated HIV viral loads and more advanced HIV disease. Independently, alcohol abuse and chronic hepatitis C infection have also been associated with higher levels of inflammation in the bodies of HIV infected persons. However, it was previously unknown if the elevated inflammatory state in these patients was due to their HIV or other independent risk factors.
Investigators recruited 400 HIV positive subjects who were known to abuse alcohol chronically. Half of these subjects also had chronic hepatitis C. They were followed for a three- to five-year period during which clinical information and laboratory samples were collected. Levels of seven well-known pro-inflammatory cytokine molecules were measured at baseline. From the beginning of the study in 2001 until data gathering was concluded in 2009, all patients were tracked in a national database to verify their survival status.
Based on this analysis, the researchers found that at the end of the study period, 85 out of the original 400 patients had died. Although these patients represent a population already at high risk of mortality from many problems (smoking, drug abuse, homelessness, etc.), most deaths in the study period were a result of either HIV or hepatitis C. Adjusting for known risk factors, such as age, smoking and hepatitis status, the researchers found that an increased burden of inflammation was strongly associated with increased mortality in alcohol-abusing HIV patients. This association was found, regardless of whether or not patients were taking their antiretroviral drugs. One inflammatory molecule in particular, known as interleukin-6 (IL-6) was found to have the strongest association with mortality among patients in the study.
"Current antiretroviral drug regimens may be able to improve mortality in most patients, but are unable to decrease the potentially dangerous burden of a chronic inflammatory state in the body," said Fuster. "Additional research should explore how to better manage chronic inflammation in these patients."
###
This research was supported by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (grant award numbers R01-AA13216 and K24-AA015674); the National Institute on Drug Abuse (grant award number R25DA13582), and the Spanish Ministries of Education (grant award number EDU/3495/2010), Science and Innovation (grant award numbers RD06/001/0021 and RD06/006/1014), and Health (grant award number EC11-042).
BUSM study associates pro-inflammatory molecules with early death in HIV patients
2014-01-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Streamflow alteration impacts fish diversity in local rivers
2014-01-17
Streamflow alteration impacts fish diversity in local rivers
A new USGS study quantifies change in fish diversity in response to streamflow alteration in the Tennessee River basin.
The USGS study highlights the importance of the timing, magnitude, ...
Fetal exposure to nicotine increases long-term risk of obesity
2014-01-17
Fetal exposure to nicotine increases long-term risk of obesity
Many women are encouraged to quit smoking when they become pregnant using nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) whether as gum, transdermal patches, nasal spray or lozenges. But new research ...
Kids teased in PE class exercise less a year later
2014-01-17
Kids teased in PE class exercise less a year later
A new study found that children who were bullied during P.E. class or other physical activities were less likely to participate in physical activity one year later.
Overweight or obese children who experienced ...
Study finds troubling relationship between drinking and PTSD symptoms in college students
2014-01-17
Study finds troubling relationship between drinking and PTSD symptoms in college students
BUFFALO, N.Y. – The estimated 9 percent of college students who have symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are likely to drink more alcohol than peers without ...
Survival rates of kids suffering cardiac arrest improve with new training approach
2014-01-17
Survival rates of kids suffering cardiac arrest improve with new training approach
STANFORD, Calif. — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford have found a new way to boost the survival ...
Natural 3D counterpart to graphene discovered
2014-01-17
Natural 3D counterpart to graphene discovered
Researchers at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source find new form of quantum matter
The discovery of what is essentially a 3D version of graphene – the 2D sheets of carbon through which electrons race at ...
Urban night shift police more likely to suffer long-term job injuries, study finds
2014-01-17
Urban night shift police more likely to suffer long-term job injuries, study finds
BUFFALO, N.Y. – Police officers working the night shift are significantly more likely to suffer long-term on-the-job injuries than officers on day and afternoon shifts, according ...
Silencing inhibitor of cell replication spurs beta cells to reproduce
2014-01-17
Silencing inhibitor of cell replication spurs beta cells to reproduce
PHILADELPHIA — Klaus Kaestner, PhD, professor of Genetics and postdoctoral fellow Dana Avrahami, PhD, from the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, ...
EARTH Magazine: Humans are influencing some extreme weather events, but not all
2014-01-17
EARTH Magazine: Humans are influencing some extreme weather events, but not all
Alexandria, VA – It has often been said that individual weather events cannot be attributed to global climate change, but recent advances in the science of attribution are challenging ...
Fathers' diet, bodyweight and health at conception may contribute to obesity in offspring
2014-01-17
Fathers' diet, bodyweight and health at conception may contribute to obesity in offspring
New research in The FASEB Journal suggests that obese fathers cause altered gene expression in pancreas and fat of offspring, possibly leading ...