A prospective, randomized clinical trial of antiretroviral therapies on carotid wall thickness

James H Stein, Heather J Ribaudo, Howard N Hodis, Todd T Brown, Thuy Tien T Tran, Mingzhu Yan, Elizabeth Lauer Brodell, Theodore Kelesidis, Grace A McComsey, Michael P Dube, Robert L Murphy, Judith S Currier, James H Stein, Heather J Ribaudo, Howard N Hodis, Todd T Brown, Thuy Tien T Tran, Mingzhu Yan, Elizabeth Lauer Brodell, Theodore Kelesidis, Grace A McComsey, Michael P Dube, Robert L Murphy, Judith S Currier

Abstract

Objective: This article compares the effects of initiating three contemporary antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimens on progression of carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) over 3 years.

Design: Randomized clinical trial.

Setting: Multicenter (26 institutions).

Patients: ART-naive HIV-infected individuals (n = 328) without known cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus.

Intervention: Random assignment to tenofovir/emtricitabine along with atazanavir/ritonavir (ATV/r), darunavir/ritonavir (DRV/r), or raltegravir (RAL).

Main outcome measures: Right-sided carotid IMT was evaluated by B-mode ultrasonography before ART initiation, and then after 48, 96, and 144 weeks. Comparisons of yearly rates of change in carotid IMT used mixed-effects linear regression models that permitted not only evaluation of the effects of ART on carotid IMT progression but also how ART-associated changes in traditional risk factors, bilirubin, and markers of HIV infection were associated carotid IMT progression.

Results: HIV-1 RNA suppression rates were high in all arms (>85%) over 144 weeks. Modest increases in triglycerides and non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels were observed in the protease inhibitor-containing arms compared with decreases with RAL. In contrast, carotid IMT progressed more slowly on ATV/r [8.2, 95% confidence interval (5.6, 10.8) μm/year] than DRV/r [12.9 (10.3, 15.5) μm/year, P = 0.013]; changes with RAL were intermediate [10.7 (9.2, 12.2) μm/year, P = 0.15 vs. ATV/r; P = 0.31 vs. DRV/r]. Bilirubin and non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels appeared to influence carotid IMT progression rates.

Conclusion: In ART-naive HIV-infected individuals at low cardiovascular disease risk, carotid IMT progressed more slowly in participants initiating ATV/r than those initiating DRV/r, with intermediate changes associated with RAL. This effect may be due, in part, to hyperbilirubinemia.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00851799.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
(a) Change in common carotid artery intima-media thickness progression by study week (intention to treat). (b) Change in carotid artery bifurcation intima-media thickness progression by study week (intention to treat). Point estimates and error bars give mean and 95% confidence intervals, respectively. ATV/r, atazanavir/ritonavir; DRV/r, darunavir/ritonavir; RAL, raltegravir.

Source: PubMed

3
Subscribe