Publication: Circulating metabolomic profile can predict dyslipidemia in HIV patients undergoing antiretroviral therapy.
No Thumbnail Available
Identifiers
Date
2018-04-09
Authors
Rodriguez-Gallego, Esther
Gomez, Josep
Domingo, Pere
Ferrando-Martinez, Sara
Peraire, Joaquim
Vilades, Consuelo
Veloso, Sergi
Lopez-Dupla, Miguel
Beltran-Debon, Raul
Alba, Veronica
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Dyslipidemia in HIV-infected patients is unique and pathophysiologically associated with host factors, HIV itself and the use of antiretroviral therapy (ART). The use of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) provides additional data to conventional lipid measurements concerning the number of lipoprotein subclasses and particle sizes. To investigate the ability of lipoprotein profile, we used a circulating metabolomic approach in a cohort of 103 ART-naive HIV-infected patients, who were initiating non-nucleoside analogue transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-based ART, and we subsequently followed up these patients for 36 months. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to evaluate the predictive power of NMR spectroscopy. VLDL-metabolism (including VLDL lipid concentrations, sizes, and particle numbers), total triglycerides and lactate levels resulted in good classifiers of dyslipidemia (AUC 0.903). Total particles/HDL-P ratio was significantly higher in ART-associated dyslipidemia compared to ART-normolipidemia (p = 0.001). Large VLDL-Ps were positively associated with both LDL-triglycerides (ρ 0.682, p Our data suggest that circulating metabolites have better predictive values for HIV/ART-related dyslipidemia onset than do the biochemical markers associated with conventional lipid measurements. NMR identifies changes in VLDL-P, lactate and LDL-TG as potential clinical markers of baseline HIV-dyslipidemia predisposition. Differences in circulating metabolomics, especially differences in particle size, are indicators of important derangements of mitochondrial function that are linked to ART-related dyslipidemia.
Description
MeSH Terms
Adult
Anti-Retroviral Agents
Cholesterol
Dyslipidemias
Female
HIV Infections
Humans
Male
Metabolome
Metabolomics
Middle Aged
Predictive Value of Tests
Triglycerides
Anti-Retroviral Agents
Cholesterol
Dyslipidemias
Female
HIV Infections
Humans
Male
Metabolome
Metabolomics
Middle Aged
Predictive Value of Tests
Triglycerides
DeCS Terms
Dislipidemias
VIH
Lípidos
Pacientes
Triglicéridos
Metabolómica
Lipoproteínas
Biomarcadores
Nucleósidos
VIH
Lípidos
Pacientes
Triglicéridos
Metabolómica
Lipoproteínas
Biomarcadores
Nucleósidos
CIE Terms
Keywords
ART therapy, Dyslipidemia, HIV, Lipids, Lipoproteins, Metabolomics, NMR
Citation
Rodríguez-Gallego E, Gómez J, Domingo P, Ferrando-Martínez S, Peraire J, Viladés C, et al. Circulating metabolomic profile can predict dyslipidemia in HIV patients undergoing antiretroviral therapy. Atherosclerosis. 2018 Jun;273:28-36.