Objectives: In the era of highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART), there are insufficient data regarding lipodystrophy syndromes in HIV-1-infected patients treated with regimens that do not include protease inhibitors (PIs). We studied changes in body composition in HIV-1-infected patients before and 2 years after starting a non-PI-containing antiretroviral treatment regimen.
Methods: We studied retrospectively the whole body dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scans of 23 PI-naive HIV-1-infected patients (17 males, six females), aged 37.4 +/- 9.3 years with mean CD4 count 401 +/- 130 cells/microL. Thirteen patients were on zidovudine (ZDV) + lamivudine (3TC) and 10 on ZDV + didanosine (ddI). Subjects were evaluated before the beginning of antiretroviral treatment and approximately 24 months later. For each patient body weight, CD4 T-cell counts, bone mineral content (BMC), bone mineral density (BMD) and whole body as well as regional fat and lean body mass were evaluated.
Results: A significant decrease in BMC was observed, although the T scores remained within the normal limits. Our patients also exhibited a significant decrease in body weight due almost exclusively to fat loss, while lean mass was minimally affected. Fat loss was statistically significant in the arms and legs, but not in the trunk. The above changes were most prominent in the ZDV + 3TC treatment group; in this group of patients, fat loss was also evident in the trunk. Patients on ZDV + ddI, on the other hand, only showed a significant increase in their legs' lean mass; they preserved their total fat mass and exhibited no other significant changes between the two assessments.
Conclusions: Dual NRTI therapy contributes to fat loss and reduction of bone mineral content in otherwise healthy, clinically stable, PI-naive HIV-infected adults. Compared with patients on ZDV + ddI, patients on ZDV + 3TC had a more prominent fat loss in all body regions.