Cigarette Smokers are Less Likely to Have Undetectable Viral Loads: Results from Four HIV Clinics
BACKGROUND:
The
prevalence of smoking among HIV-infected individuals is 2-3 times that of the
general population, increasing the risk of smoking-related morbidity and
mortality. We examined characteristics associated with smoking behavior among a
large cohort of HIV-infected individuals in care in the United
States.
METHODS:
A
convenience sample of 2952 HIV-infected patients in the Centers for AIDS
Research (CFAR) Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) was assessed
during routine clinic visits and was included. Multinomial logistic regression
was used to examine the relationship between smoking status, depression/panic
symptoms, alcohol/substance use, and demographic and clinical characteristics.
RESULTS:
Compared
with never-smokers, current smokers were more likely to have moderate to severe
depression (odds ratio [OR] 1.37), endorse current substance use (OR 14.09),
and less likely to report low-risk alcohol use on the Alcohol Use Disorders
Identification Test (AUDIT-C) (OR 0.73). Current smokers were less likely to
have an undetectable viral load (OR 0.75), and more likely to have current
substance abuse (OR 2.81) and moderate to severe depression (OR 1.50), relative
to smokers who had quit smoking.
CONCLUSIONS:
HIV-infected smokers are less likely to have
undetectable viral loads and frequently have psychosocial comorbidities
including depression and substance abuse that impact antiretroviral therapy adherence
and viral load suppression. To be effective, smoking-cessation interventions
need to address the complex underlying concurrent risks in this population.
By: Cropsey KL1, Willig JH, Mugavero MJ, Crane HM, McCullumsmith C, Lawrence S, Raper JL, Mathews WC, Boswell S, Kitahata MM, Schumacher JE, Saag MS;CFAR Network of Integrated Clinical Systems.
- 1University of Alabama at Birmingham (KLC, JHW, MJM, CMcC, SL, JLR, JES, MSS), Birmingham, AL; University of Washington (HMC, MMK), Seattle, WA; University of California, San Diego (WCM), San Diego, CA; Fenway Community Health Center (SB), Boston, MA.
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