Abstract

The aim of this study was to establish the contribution of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) itself on body composition changes evaluated by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Body composition evaluated by DXA in 90 HIV never treated men, without comorbidity, or current or past opportunistic infections were compared with 241 healthy volunteers. The mean duration of seropositivity from HIV diagnosis was 41 ± 62 mo, mean CD4 and viral load at the time of DXA were 402/mm 3 ± 263 (control values 500–1200/mm 3) and 4.2 log copies/mL ± 1.3. Mean age (41 vs 39 yr, respectively, for HIV never treated patients and controls) and mean height (174.5 vs 176 cm) were not different, but mean weight was lower among HIV never treated patients (69.8 vs 78.7 kg). Mean total body bone mineral density (BMD) of naive HIV-infected patients was lower than that of controls (1.20 vs 1.23 g/cm 2, p = 0.01) but not after adjustment on age, height, lean mass (LM), and fat mass ratio (FMR = % trunk fat mass/% lower limb fat mass). Fat mass (13.2 vs 16.5 kg, p < 0.0001) and LM (53.5 vs 59 kg, p < 0.0001) of naive HIV-infected patients were lower whatever the adjustment variables. The FMR was lower in naive HIV-infected men (1.0 vs 1.3, p < 0.0001) because of a decreased trunk fat mass. After adjustment on age, height, LM, and fat mass, the lower limbs fat mass percentage was higher in HIV-infected men. The profile of naïve HIV-infected patients displayed low lean and fat masses, and a fat mass repartition characterized by a predominant loss in the trunk. Those alterations may result from the catabolic effect of the chronic HIV infection.

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