
India: Vellore
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| Street entrance to Christian Medical
College, Vellore India |
Nutritional and Metabolic Issues in HIV in India/Translational
Virology Core
Although antiretrovirals are now available at relatively low cost
in India, the use of highly active antiretroviral therapy is not
yet common. Until the infrastructure for delivering and monitoring
HAART and training of physicians/providers in the initiation, monitoring
and sequencing of HAART regimens is more established, the use of
HAART may not grow to its fullest need. Until HAART is widely available,
the presentation of HIV/AIDS in India is one of wasting, respiratory
disease and diarrheal diseases: the same infectious illnesses that
have comprised such an enormous disease burden in children in this
region, even before the HIV epidemic. The CFAR is utilizing its
long-term collaborations with investigators with extensive experience
in intestinal function and diarrheal disease in India at the Christian
Medical College (CMC) in Vellore, Tamilnadu to address these issues
as they present in adults and children with HIV.
While CMC is internationally known for its expertise and investigations
in intestinal function and enteric infections, the interface between
these and HIV- infection had not been explored in depth. With the
support of the CFAR and the Fogarty Training Grant, Dr. Wanke has
been working to provide opportunities to investigators to begin
investigations of intestinal function and diarrheal illness in HIV
at CMC. Protocols to investigate malabsorption in HIV infected adults
and to examine the precise cryptosporidial biotypes that are contributing
to diarrheal disease and that allow asymptomatic carriage of the
parasites in HIV infected adults in this region have been implemented.
A protocol examining the impact of HIV on the malnutrition seen
in tuberculosis is in place and an intervention trial to attempt
to alleviate the malnutrition is being developed. The exchange of
complementary expertise between YRG Care and CMC is occurring and
collaborations between the 2 institutions in South India are developing,
fostered by the CFAR and the Fogarty
In the developed world, the use of HAART came abruptly without
a recognition of the potential for long-term complications and metabolic
impact.. Dr. Wanke has been working with investigators at YRG care
to ensure that there is an accurate survey of the nutritional and
metabolic status of HIV-infected adults prior to the initiation
of HAART at YRG Care in Chennai. As the possibility of widespread
HAART use has become real in the resource-limited world, it is critical
to examine the metabolic impact of chronic HIV infection and its
therapies to ensure that the regimens recommended in the population
at large are the regimens that are going to provide the most durable
benefit and that are the least likely to contribute to metabolic
complications. One of the major concerns raised about the metabolic
complications of HIV and its therapies is that these will contribute
to an increased risk for cardiovascular disease in HIV-infected
populations. As the risk for cardiovascular disease and insulin
resistance/glucose intolerance/ type II diabetes is so very high
in South India in general, it is important to understand the impact
of HIV and its therapies on this metabolic substrate, which may
be very different from that seen in other parts of the world. As
the risk for cardiovascular disease, the dyslipidemia and the glucose
intolerance seen with HIV therapy all depend on host and the specifics
of the HAART regimen, there is much to learn from the therapy-naïve
population in South India that will have major importance on the
ultimate success of HIV therapy. Host factors such as genetic predisposition,
diet, level of physical activity, baseline body composition and
nutritional status may all play an important role in determining
the metabolic response to HIV and to specific antiretroviral agents.
One of the cardiovascular risks most recognized in HIV infection
is a low level of HDL cholesterol; this abnormality appears to be
exacerbated by antiretroviral agents, specifically some of the protease
inhibitors. The impact of HAART regimens utilizing non-nucleoside
reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) on cholesterol profiles
and on glucose tolerance is being examined in a study at YRG Care
in collaborations fostered by the CFAR and the Fogarty.
Globally, with the availability and appropriate use of HAART, HIV
can and will evolve into a chronic, manageable disease. It is imperative
that providers around the world are able to anticipate and be prepared
with sufficient knowledge about the full impact of the HAART regimens
in common use to minimize the additional risks and maximize the
quality and duration of life for HIV infected individuals. The nutritional
and metabolic studies supported in South India by the CFAR will
assist in making this goal a realistic one.
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