TOPLINE:
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among veterans living with HIV significantly increased the risk for AIDS and multiple comorbidities, particularly arthritis, cardiovascular disease (CVD), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), chronic kidney disease (CKD), and multimorbidity — with the greatest impact seen in the first decade after diagnosis.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers conducted a prospective cohort study to assess whether PTSD is associated with increased risk for adverse clinical outcomes in veterans with HIV who received care at the Department of Veterans Affairs.
- They included 3206 veterans (97.4% men; median age at HIV diagnosis, 31.7 years; 42.1% with PTSD) who were deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan while serving in the military and initiated antiretroviral therapy before December 31, 2020.
- Participants were followed-up until December 2022, with censoring at death, the last healthcare visit, or study termination. The association between PTSD with morbidity and mortality, considering the number of deployments and levels of combat exposure were determined.
TAKEAWAY:
- PTSD significantly increased the overall risks for AIDS by 11% (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.11), CKD by 21% (aHR, 1.21), COPD by 46% (aHR, 1.46), multimorbidity by 49% (aHR, 1.49), CVD by 57% (aHR, 1.57), and arthritis by two folds (aHR, 1.95; P <.05 for all).
- Among veterans with a single deployment, those with PTSD had 92%, 87%, 80%, 53%, 44%, 32%, and 27% higher risks for asthma, CVD, arthritis, multimorbidity, COPD, liver disease, and AIDS, respectively, than those without PTSD.
- Veterans with PTSD and combat exposure had a lower risk for AIDS but higher risks for multimorbidity, asthma, CVD, and arthritis than those never diagnosed with PTSD and unexposed to combat.
- The associations of PTSD with mortality and morbidity appeared most pronounced in the first decade post-diagnosis, followed by a gradual decline in association strength; however, risks remained elevated.
IN PRACTICE:
“It is recommended that providers who work with VWH [veterans with HIV] consider adopting a trauma-informed model of HIV care and that providers screen veterans for PTSD, so that their unique trauma history can help guide medical decisions and treatment,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
This study was led by Kartavya J. Vyas, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta. It was published online on May 22, 2025, in AIDS.
LIMITATIONS:
The data could not capture each individual’s true index trauma or the severity of their PTSD. Additionally, the study was limited by considerable loss to follow-up, potential uncontrolled confounding related to homelessness, and a lack of generalizability to veterans with HIV who were not receiving antiretroviral therapy.
DISCLOSURES:
The study did not receive any specific funding. Two authors reported receiving federal research support — one from the Emory Center for AIDS Research and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the other from the National Institutes of Health and the CDC — in addition to investigator-initiated grants and consulting fees from various pharmaceutical companies.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
Source link : https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-may-increase-morbidity-risk-2025a1000g0v?src=rss
Author :
Publish date : 2025-06-16 10:34:00
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