1. Impact of nutritional supplementation on immune response, body mass index and bioelectrical impedance in HIV-positive patients starting antiretroviral therapy.
- Author
-
Evans D, McNamara L, Maskew M, Selibas K, van Amsterdam D, Baines N, Webster T, and Sanne I
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers blood, Body Composition, Demography, Electric Impedance, Energy Intake, Female, HIV Infections drug therapy, Humans, Male, Motor Activity, Patient Compliance, Pilot Projects, Weight Gain, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Body Mass Index, Dietary Supplements, HIV Infections diet therapy
- Abstract
Background: Challenges to HIV care in resource limited settings (RLS) include malnutrition. Limited evidence supports the benefit of nutritional supplementation when starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) in RLS., Methods: Randomized controlled pilot study. HIV-positive ART-naive adults with self-reported weight loss were randomized to receive ART plus FutureLife porridge nutritional supplement (NS) (388 kcal/day) or ART alone (Controls) for 6 months. Patients returned for monthly assessments and blood was drawn at enrolment and 6 months on ART. Differences in body composition, biochemical and laboratory parameters were estimated at 6 months on treatment., Results: Of the 36 randomized patients, 26 completed the 6 month follow-up (11 NS vs 15 Controls). At enrolment, groups were similar in terms of age, gender, body mass index (BMI) and bioelectrical impedance. NS patients had a lower median CD4 count (60 cells/mm3 [IQR 12-105 vs. 107 cells/mm3 [IQR 63-165]; p = 0.149) and hemoglobin (10.3 g/dL [IQR 9.0-11.3] vs. 13.1 g/dL [IQR 11.1-14.7]; p = 0.001)., Conclusion: Preliminary results are encouraging and suggest that NS taken concurrently with ART can promote weight gain, improve immune response and improve physical activity in HIV-positive patients that present at ART initiation with weight loss.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF