posted on 2024-04-17, 09:33authored byLaura Cechin, Lourdes Dominguez-Dominguez, Lucy Campbell, Lisa Hamzah, Julie Fox, Royce P Vincent, Georgios K Dimitriadis, Louise Goff, Frank A Post
Background There are no validated waist circumference (WC) cut-offs to define metabolic syndrome in Black people with HIV. Methods Cross-sectional analyses within the CKD-AFRICA study. We used Pearson correlation coefficients and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves to describe the relationship between WC and cardiometabolic parameters including triglycerides, cholesterol, glucose, glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), and homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), and to identify optimal WC cut-offs for each of these outcomes. Results We included 383 participants (55% female, median age 52 years) with generally well controlled HIV. Female and male participants had similar WC (median 98 vs. 97 cm, p = .16). Generally weak correlations (r2 < 0.2) between WC and other cardiometabolic parameters were observed, with low (<0.7) areas under the ROC curves. The optimal WC cut-offs for constituents of the metabolic syndrome, HbA1c and HOMA-IR ranged from 92 to 101 cm in women and 89-98 cm in men, respectively; these cut-offs had variable sensitivity (52%–100%) and generally poor specificity (28%–72%). Conclusions In this cohort of Black people with HIV, WC cut-offs for cardiometabolic risk factors in male participants were in line with the recommended value of 94 cm while in female participants they vastly exceeded the recommended 80 cm for white women.
Cechin L, Dominguez-Dominguez L, Campbell L, et al. Waist circumference and cardiometabolic parameters in people of African/Caribbean ancestry with HIV in South London (CKD-AFRICA study). International Journal of STD & AIDS. 2024
The database contains personal and sensitive information and is therefore not publicly available. Access to the study data and/or samples is governed by the National Health Service data access policy and those of King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, the study sponsor. The GEN-AFRICA and CKD-AFRICA studies are open to collaboration, and all requests from researchers who meet the criteria for access to fully anonymized patient level data will be considered. Enquiries and requests can be submitted for review to the principal investigator (Prof. Frank Post; email: frank.post@kcl.ac.uk).