
HIV Replication Alters the Composition of Extrinsic Pathway Coagulation Factors and Increases Thrombin Generation
Author(s) -
Baker Jason V.,
BrummelZiedins Kathleen,
Neuhaus Jacqueline,
Duprez Daniel,
Cummins Nathan,
Dalmau David,
DeHovitz Jack,
Lehmann Clara,
Sullivan Ann,
Woolley Ian,
Kuller Lewis,
Neaton James D.,
Tracy Russell P.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of the american heart association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.494
H-Index - 85
ISSN - 2047-9980
DOI - 10.1161/jaha.113.000264
Subject(s) - medicine , replication (statistics) , coagulation , viral replication , thrombin generation , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , antiretroviral therapy , antithrombin , immunology , thrombin , viral load , virology , virus , heparin , platelet
Background HIV infection leads to activation of coagulation, which may increase the risk for atherosclerosis and venous thromboembolic disease. We hypothesized that HIV replication increases coagulation potentially through alterations in extrinsic pathway factors. Methods and Results Extrinsic pathway factors were measured among a subset of HIV participants from the Strategies for Management of Anti‐Retroviral Therapy ( SMART ) trial. Thrombin generation was estimated using validated computational modeling based on factor composition. We characterized the effect of antiretroviral therapy ( ART ) treatment versus the untreated state ( HIV replication) via 3 separate analyses: (1) a cross‐sectional comparison of those on and off ART (n=717); (2) a randomized comparison of deferring versus starting ART (n=217); and (3) a randomized comparison of stopping versus continuing ART (n=500). Compared with viral suppression, HIV replication consistently showed short‐term increases in some procoagulants (eg, 15% to 23% higher FVIII ; P <0.001) and decreases in key anticoagulants (eg, 5% to 9% lower antithrombin [ AT ] and 6% to 10% lower protein C; P <0.01). The net effect of HIV replication was to increase coagulation potential (eg, 24% to 48% greater thrombin generation from computational models; P <0.01 for all). The pattern of changes from HIV replication was reversed with ART treatment and consistent across all 3 independent comparisons. Conclusions HIV replication leads to complex changes in extrinsic pathway factors, with the net effect of increasing coagulation potential to a degree that may be clinically relevant. The key influence of changes in FVIII and AT suggests that HIV ‐related coagulation abnormalities may involve changes in hepatocyte function in the context of systemic inflammation. Clinical Trial Registration URL: ClinicalTrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT 00027352.