RAAS Activation Is Associated With Visceral Adiposity and Insulin Resistance Among HIV-infected Patients

Suman Srinivasa, Kathleen V Fitch, Kimberly Wong, Martin Torriani, Caitlin Mayhew, Takara Stanley, Janet Lo, Gail K Adler, Steven K Grinspoon, Suman Srinivasa, Kathleen V Fitch, Kimberly Wong, Martin Torriani, Caitlin Mayhew, Takara Stanley, Janet Lo, Gail K Adler, Steven K Grinspoon

Abstract

Context: Little is known about renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) activation in relationship to visceral adipose tissue (VAT) accumulation in HIV-infected patients, a population at significant risk for insulin resistance and other metabolic disease.

Design: Twenty HIV and 10 non-HIV-infected subjects consumed a standardized low sodium or liberal sodium diet to stimulate or suppress the RAAS, respectively. RAAS parameters were evaluated in response to each diet and a graded angiotensin II infusion. Further analyses were performed after groups were substratified by median VAT measured by magnetic resonance imaging.

Results: Aldosterone concentrations during the low-sodium diet were higher in HIV than non-HIV-infected subjects [13.8 (9.7, 30.9) vs 9.2 (7.6, 13.6) ng/dL, P = .03] and increased across groups stratified by visceral adipose tissue (VAT) [8.5 (7.1, 12.8), 9.2 (8.1, 21.5), 11.4 (9.4, 13.8), and 27.2 (13.0, 36.9) ng/dL in non-HIV-infected without increased VAT, non-HIV-infected with increased VAT, HIV-infected without increased VAT, HIV-infected with increased VAT, respectively, overall trend P = .02]. Under this condition, plasma renin activity [3.50 (2.58, 4.65) vs 1.45 (0.58, 2.33) ng/mL · h, P = .002] was higher among the HIV-infected subjects with vs without increased VAT. Differences in the suppressibility of plasma renin activity by graded angiotensin infusion were seen stratifying by VAT among the HIV-infected group (P < .02 at each dose). In addition, aldosterone (P = .007) was an independent predictor of insulin resistance in multivariate modeling, controlling for VAT and adiponectin.

Conclusion: These data suggest excess RAAS activation in relationship to visceral adiposity in HIV-infected patients that may independently contribute to insulin resistance. Mineralocorticoid blockade may have therapeutic potential to reduce metabolic complications in HIV-infected patients with increased visceral adiposity.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01407237.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Comparison of RAAS parameters urinary aldosterone excretion (micrograms per 24 h) (A), serum aldosterone (nanograms per deciliter) (B), and PRA (nanograms per milliliter per hour) (C) during the low-sodium and liberal sodium diets in HIV-infected patients with low VAT vs high VAT.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Ang II-stimulated PRA during the low-sodium diet (A) and liberal sodium diet (B) in HIV-infected patients with low and high VAT. *, P < .05 for HIV-infected patients with low VAT vs high VAT.

Source: PubMed

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