Increased levels of postprandial triglycerides (TG) and remnant like particles (RLP) are associated with cardiovascular disease. We evaluated whether postprandial lipemia differed in HIV-positive patients with or without different antiretroviral regimens. A standardized high fat load was administered to 28 subjects: 11 HIV-positive subjects receiving protease inhibitors (PI), 10 HIV-positive subjects receiving non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) and 7 HIV-positive subjects not receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy, HAART (Naïve). Baseline TG levels and TG area under the curve (AUC) did not differ among the three groups. The postprandial TG concentration curves were similar in the NNRTI and Naïve groups, peaking at 3-5-h. Baseline RLP cholesterol was higher in the NNRTI group compared to other two groups (P=0.035). Both HAART groups (NNRTI and PI) had higher postprandial RLP cholesterol AUC than the Naïve group (P=0.024, ANOVA). In conclusion, during HIV conditions, HAART resulted in a pro-atherogenic pattern with accumulation of remnant lipoproteins.
Despite baseline differences, incremental triacylglycerol and insulin responses to a physiologic caloric load among HIV-positive patients were not significantly affected by differences in the type of antiretroviral therapy.
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