IAS 2013: Management of Age-Related Conditions Is the Future of HIV Care
- Details
- Category: HIV Treatment
- Published on Sunday, 30 June 2013 00:00
- Written by Liz Highleyman

Other diseases are becoming far more important than AIDS for people with HIV who have consistent access and good response to antiretroviral treatment, and management of age-related comorbidities will become an increasingly important aspect of HIV medicine worldwide in the coming years, Steven Deeks argued in his keynote address yesterday at the 7th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2013).
Deeks, from the University of California at San Francisco, has done extensive research on both aging with HIV and cure-related strategies. Preceding the conference, he co-chaired a 2-day "Towards an HIV Cure" symposium with IAS president Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Sharon Lewin from Monash University.
Among HIV positive people on effective antiretroviral therapy (ART), the virus is kept under control, the immune system works pretty well, and AIDS-related conditions are uncommon, Deeks said. "For people with drug-susceptible virus, who are motivated to take the drugs, and who have life-long access to therapy, AIDS is no longer the problem." Instead, he explained, "HIV is looking a lot like other chronic diseases," characterized by persistent low-level immune activation and inflammation.
Several studies have shown that HIV independently confers an excess risk for cardiovascular disease and other non-AIDS conditions. A large U.S. veterans cohort study that compared HIV positive and negative people matched for age and other factors found that people with HIV had about a 1.5-fold higher rate of heart disease -- about the same excess risk associated with having diabetes. Effects of a similar size have been seen for bone loss, neurological impairment, kidney disease, and certain types of cancer, Deeks noted.
Another study found that HIV positive people in their 50s have as many comorbidities, on average, as HIV negative people 10 or 15 years older. "It looks like [HIV] adds a decade in terms of age-associated conditions," he said.
People with treated HIV have increased levels of multiple markers of inflammation. And these markers -- especially interleukin 6 (IL-6) and D-dimer -- predict excess risk of morbidity and mortality.
"If we venture out of the HIV world into rheumatology, cardiology, and especially geriatrics, similar observations are made," Deeks continued. "Chronic inflammation is at least predictive -- and probably causal -- of comorbidities in study after study."
Heart attacks and the like are uncommon at age 40 to 50, so HIV has not yet had a major effect on absolute numbers, but is likely to do so as people age, he warned. "While most people with HIV are young now, as people on therapy get older -- into their 60s, 70s, and 80s -- all these other diseases could add up to problems."
Furthermore, these conditions -- mostly studied so far in the U.S. and Europe -- "are now playing out in developing world," Deeks said. "In Africans we're seeing a higher number of comorbidities even though the population is younger. The same thing that's happening in the U.S. is likely happening on a global level." These excess comorbidities and the shift to chronic disease management could overburden already stretched healthcare systems.
But fortunately, we can do something about it.
We know a lot about mechanisms of inflammation, why inflammation might cause disease, and targets for potential therapies. There are multiple drugs in the pipeline to try to reverse the process, as well as increasing evidence that starting antiretroviral treatment early rather than late may help prevent long-term residual inflammation (now being investigated in the START study).
Now that HIV is a chronic disease, Deeks argued, "we need to switch our focus from acute to chronic care, which requires a whole new set of skills and changes in the healthcare system."
Ultimately, he concluded, the various problems associated with chronic HIV disease -- excess inflammation, heart disease, overburdened health systems, not being able to afford lifelong therapy -- "could all be addressed by a cure."
"There's a tremendous amount of excitement and a bit of optimism that we're making enough progress that eventually we'll be able to cure the disease," Deeks continued. "But there are also substantial barriers to curing HIV infection -- and some of them may be insurmountable."
Making an analogy with the development of antiretroviral drugs, he suggested that cure research is where ART research was in the late 1980s, when we were learning about pathogenesis, how to measure HIV, and beginning to identify potential targets to go after the virus.
Today, we are trying to measure residual HIV in long-term treated people and have seen that certain agents can affect the biology of the virus. But "going after free virus [in the blood] was a lot easier than virus hidden in cells," he emphasized. "We have to find some ways get in there without harming the patient."
The Towards a Cure meeting featured a lot of cutting-edge research, some of which will be presented during the week at the main IAS conference. Researchers will talk more about the baby presented at this year's Retrovirus conference, which Deeks thinks "represents a clear-cut cure." There will be late-breaker presentations on allogeneic stem cell transplantation and small molecules that can "upset the steady state" of the viral reservoir.
"My geriatrician [colleagues] say if you want patients to be playing tennis in their 70s, you need to be dealing with that in their 40s," Deeks said. "I spend my time in the clinic talking about exercise, management of lipids, a Mediterranean diet, and so forth...We should all be helping our patients in their 40s and 50s live to their 70s and 80s, so they're around for a cure."
6/30/13