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Correlation between HIV viral load and aminotransferases as liver damage markers in HIV infected naive patients: a concordance cross-sectional study

José Antonio Mata-Marín1 email, Jesús Gaytán-Martínez1 email, Bernardo Horacio Grados-Chavarría2 email, José Luis Fuentes-Allen1 email, Carla Ileana Arroyo-Anduiza3 email and Alfredo Alfaro-Mejía2 email

Infectious diseases department, Hospital de Infectología, "La Raza" National Medical Center, IMSS, Mexico City, México

Internal medicine department, Hospital de Especialidades, "La Raza" National Medical Center, IMSS, Mexico City, México

Clinical pathology department, Hospital General, "La Raza" National Medical Center, IMSS, Mexico City, México

author email corresponding author email

Virology Journal 2009, 6:181doi:10.1186/1743-422X-6-181

Published: 30 October 2009

Abstract

Abnormalities in liver function tests could be produced exclusively by direct inflammation in hepatocytes, caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Mechanisms by which HIV causes hepatic damage are still unknown. Our aim was to determine the correlation between HIV viral load, and serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) as markers of hepatic damage in HIV naive infected patients.

We performed a concordance cross-sectional study. Patients with antiviral treatment experience, hepatotoxic drugs use or co-infection were excluded. We used a Pearson's correlation coefficient to calculate the correlation between aminotransferases serum levels with HIV viral load. We enrolled 59 patients, 50 men and 9 women seen from 2006 to 2008. The mean (± SD) age of our subjects was 34.24 ± 9.5, AST 37.73 ± 29.94 IU/mL, ALT 43.34 ± 42.41 IU/mL, HIV viral load 199,243 ± 292,905 copies/mL, and CD4+ cells count 361 ± 289 cells/mm3. There was a moderately strong, positive correlation between AST serum levels and HIV viral load (r = 0.439, P < 0.001); and a weak correlation between ALT serum levels and HIV viral load (r = 0.276, P = 0.034); after adjusting the confounders in lineal regression model the correlation remained significant. Our results suggest that there is an association between HIV viral load and aminotransferases as markers of hepatic damage; we should improved recognition, diagnosis and potential therapy of hepatic damage in HIV infected patients.


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