Prevalence of Low Bone Mineral Density in Men and Women Infected With Human Immunodeficiency Virus 1 and a Proposal for Screening Strategy

2012 
Abstract We analyzed data collected during screening for eligibility in the ANRS-120 FOSIVIR clinical trial to estimate the prevalence of osteoporosis in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1), to study its risk factors, and to develop a screening strategy. McNemar test was used to compare the estimated prevalence of osteoporosis, using 3 different definitions. We then derived a screening strategy for HIV-infected men. We analyzed data for 700 men and 192 women. The prevalence of osteoporosis differed markedly according to the definition used. Based on the "T-score≤−2.5" definition, 14.9% of men and 1.0% of women had osteoporosis. Factors associated with low bone mineral density comprised not only classical risk factors for osteoporosis such as low body mass index (BMI) or older age but also factors associated with HIV infection such as lower CD4 T-cell nadir in men and AIDS in women, and with antiretroviral treatment such as recent tenofovir therapy. In addition to postmenopausal women, we recommend osteoporosis screening for HIV-infected men older than 60yr, men younger than 60yr with BMI 2 , and men younger than 60yr with both BMI 20–23kg/m 2 and a CD4 T-cell nadir ≤200/mm 3 .
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