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Prevalence of non-infectious comorbidities in the HIV-positive population in Belgium: a multicenter, retrospective study

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Gunter J, Callens S, De Wit S, Goffard JC, Moutschen M, Darcis G, Meuris C, van den Bulcke C, Fombellida K, Del Forge M, Razavi H, Wyndham-Thomas C. Prevalence of non-infectious comorbidities in the HIV-positive population in Belgium: a multicenter, retrospective study. Acta Clin Belg. 2018 Feb;73(1):50-53. doi: 10.1080/17843286.2017.1339965. Epub 2017 Jun 16. PMID: 28622754.



Summary

Objectives

In Belgium, eleven AIDS Reference Centers (ARCs) and seven AIDS Reference Laboratories diagnose and treat HIV-positive individuals and track patients under care. As AIDS-related deaths are avoided and the HIV-positive population ages, non-infectious comorbidities (NICMs), such as cardiovascular disease, renal disease and certain cancers, play a larger role in the quality and length of patients’ lives. This study aims to characterize the HIV-positive population in Belgium in terms of the prevalence of key NICMs.

Methods

We performed a retrospective study of 5787 HIV-positive patients under follow-up at four ARCs across Belgium between 1st of June 2014 and 1st of July 2016. Results: The mean age of patients under follow-up was 46.7 (SD = 11.6) years, and the mean nadir CD4 count was 268.8 cells/mm3 (SD = 189.5). The prevalence of diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension and chronic kidney disease (CKD) were 5.9, 31 and 7.8%, respectively. Cardiovascular events, defined as the occurrence of myocardial infarction, stroke or an invasive coronary procedure, occurred in 2.9% of patients. The highest age-adjusted mortality rates were observed among patients 51–55 years of age. Mortality rates were also higher among patients with CKD and patients with viremic hepatitis C virus (p < 0.05).

Conclusions

Helping the aging HIV-positive population avoids premature morbidity and mortality from NICMs represents a key challenge to further improve patient outcomes. Belgium has an advanced system of HIV care and patient management; however, standardized data collection across ARCs is needed to improve knowledge sharing and to support future countrywide analyses.

Countries: Belgium

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