Epidemiology, assessment, and management of excess abdominal fat in persons with HIV infection.
Moyle. Graeme G; Moutschen. Michel M; Martínez. Esteban E; Domingo. Pere P; Guaraldi. Giovanni G; Raffi. François F; Behrens. Georg G; Reiss. Peter P
Key Findings
- Visceral fat is common in HIV and raises heart‑disease and diabetes risk.
- Metformin, antiretroviral switching, and testosterone can modestly improve fat distribution.
- Tesamorelin (and high‑dose GH) significantly reduces visceral fat in 12‑24 weeks, but only while dosing continues.
Practical Outcomes
- Tesamorelin can be added to a protocol for cutting abdominal fat, but you must stay on it continuously to keep the benefit. Track waist size, lipid panels, and glucose while on it, and weigh the cost and potential side‑effects against the expected fat loss.
Summary
The study shows that the growth‑hormone‑releasing hormone analog tesamorelin can cut belly‑fat (visceral fat) in about 3‑6 months, but the effect disappears if you stop taking it. It’s one of several options (like metformin or switching HIV meds) that can help lower the risky fat that often builds up in people with HIV.
Abstract
Metabolic and morphologic abnormalities in persons with HIV remain common contributors to stigma and morbidity. Increased abdominal circumference and visceral adiposity were first recognized in the late 1990s, soon after the advent of effective combination antiretroviral therapy. Visceral adiposity is commonly associated with metabolic abnormalities including low HDL-cholesterol, raised triglycerides, insulin resistance, and hypertension, a constellation of risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus known as "the metabolic syndrome". Medline and conference abstracts were searched to identify clinical research on factors associated with visceral adiposity and randomized studies of management approaches. Data were critically reviewed by physicians familiar with the field. A range of host and lifestyle factors as well as antiretroviral drug choice were associated with increased visceral adiposity. Management approaches included treatment switching and metformin, both of which have shown benefit for insulin-resistant individuals with isolated fat accumulation. Testosterone supplements may also have benefits in a subset of individuals. Supra-physiological doses of recombinant human growth hormone and the growth hormone releasing hormone analog tesamorelin both significantly and selectively reduce visceral fat over 12-24 weeks; however, the benefits are only maintained if doping is continued. In summary, the prevention and management of visceral adiposity remains a substantial challenge in clinical practice.
Study Information
pubmed
2010