Abstract

Persons with well-treated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) demonstrate a 2-fold higher risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), which may be related to excess visceral adipose tissue (VAT). The visceral adiposity index (VAI) is a score to approximate VAT by combining biochemical measures with anthropometrics without quantification by imaging. We evaluated VAI in association with cardiometabolic factors among persons with HIV (PWH). Forty-five PWH on antiretroviral therapy and virologically controlled with increased abdominal VAT (VAT area >110 cm2 on CT) and no known CVD were included. VAI was calculated using standard sex-specific formulas. Coronary plaque was assessed using coronary CT angiography. Participants were predominantly male (73%), white (53%), and non-Hispanic (84%), with a mean age of 55 (standard deviation, 7) years. Among PWH, median VAI was calculated to be 4.9 (interquartile range [IQR], 2.8-7.3). Log VAI correlated with log VAT (r = 0.59, P < .0001) and anthropometric measures (body mass index: r = 0.36, P = .02; waist circumference: r = 0.43, P = .004; waist-to-hip ratio: r = 0.33, P = .03). Participants with coronary plaque had a higher VAI compared to those without coronary plaque (median, 5.3 [IQR, 3.4-10.5] vs 2.8 [IQR, 1.8-5.0]; P = .004). VAI (area under the curve = 0.760, P = .008) performed better than the atherosclerotic CVD risk score to predict the presence of plaque in receiver operating characteristic analyses. VAI may be a useful biomarker of metabolic dysfunction and increased CVD risk that may occur with VAT accumulation in PWH. NCT02740179.

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