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42 White matter injury is driven by HIV duration, immune and vascular factors in virally suppressed people living with HIV: a longitudinal diffusion imaging study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2023

David Jakabek
Affiliation:
St. Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Bruce J Brew
Affiliation:
St. Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Lucette A Cysique*
Affiliation:
The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia
*
Correspondence: Lucette Cysique, The University of New South Wales, School of Psychology, lcysique@unsw.edu.au
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Abstract

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Objective:

The aim of the current longitudinal study was to use improved brain white matter integrity outcomes (better at resolving white matter complexity, hence with improved biological significance compared to traditional diffusion tensor imaging - DTI outcomes) while considering baseline age, cardiovascular diseases (CVD), and HIV disease markers impacts on the health of major white matter tracts in virally suppressed people Living with HIV infection (PLHIV) versus demographically, geographically, and life-style comparable HIVnegative controls. Furthermore, white-matter hyperintensity (WMH) and normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) volumes and microstructure were considered.

Participants and Methods:

At baseline 48 HIV-controls and 84 virally suppressed PLHIV (mean age 55), and at 24-month follow-up, 40 HIV-controls and 75 virally suppressed PLHIV underwent an MRI scan (3T Phillips) collecting a high-resolution anatomical MRI, FLAIR, and a 32-direction diffusion imaging. The diffusion data were processed using mrtrix and intra-cranial volume-corrected outcomes included fibre density (FD), fibre cross-section (log was used; logFC) and a composite fibre density and cross-section (FDC). The volumetric data was first processed in Freesurfer 6.0, and WMH were segmented using the “pgs” U-Net neural network. Using mixed models, we examine the longitudinal mrtrix outcomes across major white matter tracts by HIV status, and associations with CVD (sum of the scaled scores of total cholesterol, HDL, Systolic BP, current smoking, and diabetes) and HIV disease (HIV duration, historical AIDS, nadir CD4, baseline CD4) markers. Additionally, we assessed the volume, and FDC in the periventricular and deep WMH, as well as NAWM, and the associations with CVD and HIV disease markers. We used FDR control procedure (alpha = 0.05), and all p-values reported are FDR adjusted.

Results:

Relative to controls, PLHIV showed significant reductions (p<.05 - p<.01) of FC, and FDC to a lesser extent, in multiple long cortical association tracts, and within striatal- and thalamic-frontoparietal connections. A small HIV by age interaction was only detected for FC of inferior longitudinal fasciculus (Beta = -0.004, SE = 0.002 p<.04). However, HIV duration (corrected for baseline age) was associated with worse FDC across multiple tracts (p<03 -p<.001). Baseline CD4 counts associated with lower FD in frontal association tracts (p<.05 -p<.005). Furthermore, WMH increased in size with time, age, and higher CVD risk factors, but not HIV status. In PLHIV, deep WMH and NAWM microstructure were both associated with worse CVD but not HIV disease markers.

Conclusions:

The fine integrity of major white matter tracts is impacted by HIV status, HIV duration and baseline CD4, whereas WMH and NAWM volumes and microstructure are affected by CVD. Our study provides further evidence of the immuno-vascular underpinning of HIV neuropathogenesis in virally suppressed PLHIV. The convergence of these effects in aging PLHIV may lead to early neurodegeneration. Hence, improving CVD health and maintaining high CD4 is critical.

Type
Poster Session 10: Late Breaking Science
Copyright
Copyright © INS. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2023