Description
As treatment for HIV/AIDS has advanced and improved the quality of life of the affected population, it has also led to increased survival and a change in HIV epidemiology whereby the older HIV population face an increasing number of chronic diseases associated with aging. HIV comorbidities are an impending public health problem. Cardiovascular, lung, and blood diseases, as well as sleep disorders, are predicted to be significantly higher than the current prevalence rates in the non-HIV population. It is estimated that by 2030, 84% of the HIV population will have at least one of the comorbidities, 28% will have more than 3 comorbidities, and 78% will be diagnosed with cardiovascular disease. The factors that play a role in the increased risk of comorbidities in people living with HIV are still unclear, but elements such as long term use of antiretroviral therapy (ART), smoking, sustained HIV-induced immune activation, chronic inflammation, and interaction with other non-ART drugs are likely to play a role in end-organ complications.
Working Group Overview
The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) organized a Working Group (WG) on December 14-15, 2015 in Bethesda, MD, entitled “NHLBI AIDS Working Group: Refining Current Scientific Priorities & Identifying New Scientific Gaps in HIV-related Heart, Lung, Blood, and Sleep (HLBS) Research”. The primary goal of the meeting was to identify future scientific priorities for NHLBI HIV/AIDS research. The core objectives of the WG included discussions on: 1) HIV-related HLBS Comorbidities; 2) HIV Cure; 3) Prevention; and 4) impacting the health of people living with HIV (PLWHIV). We viewed the 2015 WG as an occasion to obtain expert advice about potential approaches to address current HIV/AIDS scientific priorities.
In order to achieve the core objectives described above, WG participants were asked to develop recommendations aligned with the -NIH Office of AIDS Research Strategic Plan as follows: 1) recommendations on the top scientific priorities in HIV-related HLBS and implementation science issues; 2) strategies to enhance dialogue and collaboration among different scientific communities; and 3) approaches to leveraging existing resources (e.g., cohorts, datasets, etc.)
The meeting was structured as two plenary sessions to cover broad basic and clinical research talks followed by breakout sessions for each of the heart, lung/sleep, blood, and implementation science areas during which specific challenges and future directions for each field were addressed, and in some cases, disease-specific issues discussed. Examples of topics during breakout sessions for the heart sub-group session included heart failure and coronary artery disease; the lung session discussed HIV-related inflammation consequences and contribution to co-morbid disease development and the role of ART in development of comorbidities; the blood session focused on three broad themes including 1) hematological abnormalities in ART-treated HIV patients and inflammation, 2) cell and gene therapy for HIV cure, and 3) prevention of transfusion-transmission of HIV and global blood safety; the implementation session focused on understanding how evidence-based interventions (e.g., aspirin for the primary prevention of CVD in PLWHIV) can be sustainably scaled to address the disparities in treatment outcomes that PLWHIV encounter at the local, state, national, and international settings. WG participants were asked to identify the highest priority research gaps within their areas of focus and recommend future research strategies to address those gaps. The top scientific priorities discussed for heart, lung/sleep, blood and implementation science focused on epidemiology, pathogenesis, and the prevention, control, and treatment of HIV-related co-morbidities. The scientific recommendations are presented in the tables below and are categorized by the topics addressed in each break-out session.