Abstract

HIV‐infected patients commonly experience changes in central and peripheral fat content as well as ectopic fat accumulation. However, whether hepatic and epicardial fat stores relate differentially to body composition or how these associations are modified by HIV status has not been well explored. A previously recruited sample of 124 HIV‐infected patients and 58 healthy controls had undergone dual energy X‐ray absorptiometry (DEXA) and computed tomography (CT) from which body composition measures, liver–spleen ratio, and epicardial fat volume were obtained. Unique to the HIV‐infected group, there was a parabolic association between abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) area and liver–spleen ratio (P = 0.03, inflection point 324 cm2) such that hepatic fat content was greatest at the extremes of low and high SAT. A quadratic model also closely described the relationship between mean leg fat and liver–spleen ratio among patients with HIV (P = 0.02, inflection point 4.7 kg), again suggesting greater liver fat content with both low and high leg fat. Notably, an analogous relationship of epicardial fat with SAT was not evident among HIV‐infected individuals or healthy controls. In contrast, visceral adipose tissue (VAT) linearly related to both liver–spleen ratio in HIV and epicardial fat volume irrespective of HIV status in multivariable models. In conclusion, our analyses implicate both low and high SAT as risk factors for hepatic fat accumulation in HIV. These findings add to growing evidence of SAT dysfunction in the setting of HIV infection, and highlight key physiologic differences between hepatic and epicardial fat depots.

Highlights

  • HIV-infected individuals may experience complex changes in body composition reflecting the interaction of virus, host, and antiretroviral therapy (ART) superimposed on general population trends (Erlandson and Lake 2016)

  • The current study demonstrates that hepatic and epicardial fat depots uniquely relate to body composition, and that these patterns vary by HIV status

  • In patients with HIV, we show for the first time a parabolic association between abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) and liver–spleen ratio, suggesting an increase in hepatic fat content at low and high SAT extremes

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Summary

Introduction

HIV-infected individuals may experience complex changes in body composition reflecting the interaction of virus, host, and antiretroviral therapy (ART) superimposed on general population trends (Erlandson and Lake 2016). These alterations include lipohypertrophy of the abdomen, often in the context of a normal body mass index (BMI), and lipoatrophy of the limbs (Martinez 2011). Mechanisms that may account for HIV lipoatrophy include viral modulation of adipocyte metabolism (Agarwal et al 2013), and ARTrelated mitochondrial toxicity (Martinez 2011)

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