AI Article Synopsis

  • Frailty affects individuals living with HIV earlier than in those without HIV; this study in Greece aimed to determine its prevalence among this population and link frailty criteria to clinical data.
  • The study involved 477 HIV-positive participants, primarily men (93%), with a median age of 43; findings showed 62.1% were robust, 33.8% pre-frail, and 4.1% frail, highlighting weakness in grip strength as the most common frailty indicator.
  • The results emphasize the importance of a comprehensive care approach, as factors such as lower CD4 counts and psychiatric issues correlate with frailty, indicating varied healthcare needs for people living with HIV.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Frailty is known to affect people living with HIV prematurely, compared to the ageing seronegative population. In this cross-sectional study, we aimed to assess frailty prevalence in people living with HIV in Greece and find associations of frailty criteria with clinical data.

Methods: Demographic and clinical data were collected from 477 participants in six HIV clinics. Fried's frailty phenotype was used to assess frailty prevalence, and participants were classified as frail, pre-frail or robust. Associations of several factors with overall frailty phenotype, as well as with frailty criteria, were explored.

Results: The median age was 43 years old (IQR = 51.5) and 444/477 (93%) were men. Most of the participants (429/477, 93.5%) had an undetectable HIV viral load, and a CD4 cell count over 500 cells/μl (366/477, 76.7%). Frailty assessment classified 285/477 (62.1%) as robust, 155/477 (33.8%) as pre-frail and 19/477 (4.1%) as frail. Weakness in grip strength was the most prevalent criterion (128/477, 26.8%), followed by exhaustion (46/477, 9.6%). Lower CD4 cell count, history of AIDS diagnosis, CNS disorders, psychiatric diagnoses, and polypharmacy were strongly associated with frailty.

Conclusions: Although the prevalence of frailty in people living with HIV in Greece is uncommon, when combined with pre-frailty over a third of people are affected, which requires attention in clinical practice. The physical and psychological aspects of frailty highlight the need for a holistic approach to prevent or counteract it. The diverse associations of frailty criteria with HIV-related and non-HIV-related factors suggest a possible variation in people's different healthcare needs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hiv.13356DOI Listing

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