HIV-positive people not on antiretrovirals are prone to inflammation-related bone loss

Corrilynn Hileman, from Case Western Reserve University, speaking at the ID Week Conference.
This article is more than 10 years old. Click here for more recent articles on this topic

HIV-positive people not taking antiretroviral therapy experienced more bone mineral density loss at the hip and were somewhat more likely to develop osteopenia or osteoporosis than HIV-negative individuals, researchers reported at the IDWeek 2013 conference held recently in San Francisco. They also found that bone loss amongst people with HIV appeared to be linked to inflammation.

People with HIV are more prone than HIV-negative people to bone loss – including osteopenia and more severe osteoporosis – but whether this is attributable to HIV infection itself, resulting inflammatory and metabolic changes, antiretroviral drug toxicity, or a combination of these and other factors is not fully understood. 

Certain antiretrovirals – notably tenofovir (Viread) and protease inhibitors – are known to be associated with bone loss, but bone changes in people not yet on antiretroviral therapy (ART) have not been extensively studied. The role of inflammation and vitamin D in bone health is unclear and may be easier to study in treatment-naive individuals.

Glossary

bone mineral density (BMD)

The higher your bone mineral content, the denser your bones are. And the denser your bones, the stronger they are and the less likely they are to break. A bone density test uses X-rays to measure how many grams of calcium and other bone minerals are packed into a segment of bone. The bones that are most commonly tested are in the spine, hip and sometimes the forearm. 

inflammation

The general term for the body’s response to injury, including injury by an infection. The acute phase (with fever, swollen glands, sore throat, headaches, etc.) is a sign that the immune system has been triggered by a signal announcing the infection. But chronic (or persisting) inflammation, even at low grade, is problematic, as it is associated in the long term to many conditions such as heart disease or cancer. The best treatment of HIV-inflammation is antiretroviral therapy.

osteopenia

A condition in which bone mineral density is lower than normal, but less severe than osteoporosis.

osteoporosis

Bone disease characterised by a decrease in bone mineral density and bone mass, resulting in an increased risk of fracture (a broken bone).

naive

In HIV, an individual who is ‘treatment naive’ has never taken anti-HIV treatment before.

Corrilynn Hileman from Case Western Reserve University and colleagues looked at changes in hip and spine bone density over time, progression to osteopenia or osteoporosis, and relationships between bone loss and inflammatory markers and vitamin D levels.

This prospective single-site study included 47 antiretroviral-naive HIV-positive adults with CD4 cell counts greater than 400 cells/mm3 and 41 healthy HIV-negative control subjects matched by sex, age and race.

Most (about 70%) were men, 69% were African-American, about 30% were white and the median age was 39 years. People in the HIV-positive group had been infected for four years on average and the mean CD4 count was 625 cells/mm3. The median body mass index (BMI) was 26 kg/m2. HIV-positive people were significantly more likely than HIV-negative volunteers to be current smokers (72 vs 15%) and to have hepatitis C (19 vs 2%). People with diabetes or active infections or inflammatory conditions were excluded.

At study entry and 48 weeks later participants underwent dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scans of the hip and lumbar spine, as well as measurement of vitamin D and inflammation biomarkers including interleukin 6 (IL-6), high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), soluble tumor necrosis factor alfa receptors I and II (sTNFR-I and sTNFR-II), and the adhesion molecules sVCAM-1 and sICAM-1.

The HIV-positive group had significantly higher baseline levels of IL-6 (3.0 vs 2.2 pg/mL, respectively), sTNFR-II (2434 vs 1965 pg/mL), sVCAM-1 (782 vs 544 ng/mL) and sICAM-1 (300 vs 187 ng/mL), but levels of hsCRP, sTNFR-I and vitamin D (13 vs 15 ng/mL) were similar.

Between baseline and 48 weeks, levels of vitamin D and inflammation biomarker levels did not change significantly in either group, nor did changes differ significantly between the two groups.

At baseline, the HIV-positive and HIV-negative groups had similar total hip, femoral neck, trochanter (ball of the hip joint) and spine bone density. In both groups, a majority (62 and 68%, respectively) had normal BMD and one-third had osteopenia (lower than normal bone mineral density); 4.4% of HIV-positive people and no HIV-negative people had osteoporosis, but this difference was not significant.

Over 48 weeks, HIV-positive people showed a larger percentage BMD loss at the total hip, trochanter and spine, whilst HIV-negative people lost more at the femoral neck, but none of these differences reached statistical significance.

At 48 weeks, 93% of people with HIV experienced bone loss at any site compared with 73% of HIV-negative people, a difference that was significant after adjusting for sex, age, race, baseline BMI, smoking and hepatitis C status. This was particularly notable at the trochanter, with 73 and 49%, respectively, showing bone loss (also significant after adjustment).

Being HIV positive conferred a greater likelihood of trochanter BMD loss, with an odds ratio (OR) of 2.8, or nearly three-fold higher risk. Adding IL-6, sTNFR-II, sVCAM-1, sICAM-1 or vitamin D to the analysis along with HIV status reduced the OR by more than 10%, suggesting inflammation may explain part of the effect of HIV.

Over 48 weeks 21% of HIV-positive people progressed to osteopenia or osteoporosis compared with 6% of HIV-negative individuals, but the difference did not reach statistical significance. The only independent predictors of progression in an adjusted analysis were white race and higher baseline IL-6 level.

"ART-naive HIV-positive adults, but not [HIV-negative] controls, had BMD loss at the total hip and trochanter sites over 48 weeks," the researchers concluded.

"HIV-positive [people] were more likely to have bone loss at the trochanter site and this appears to be associated with systemic inflammation," they added.

References

Hileman C et al. Inflammation, vitamin D and change in bone mineral density (BMD) in antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naive HIV-infected and uninfected adults – a 48-week matched prospective cohort study. IDWeek 2013, San Francisco, abstract 674, 2013. View the abstract on the IDWeek website.