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Red Dresses & Red Ribbons: What Every Health Care Provider Needs to Know about Cardiovascular Disease and HIV in Women

Lead Image (created by Cynthia Rentrope):

Lead Image (created by Cynthia Rentrope):

Each February, we celebrate Go Red for Women – a time for healthcare providers to reacquaint ourselves with the shocking fact that on average one woman dies from cardiovascular disease (CVD) every minute – and recommit to doing better. In the United States and the around the globe, women living with HIV are at higher risk for developing cardiovascular disease, yet not all women are affected equally. There are disparities in the quality of cardiovascular care in women, especially younger women, compared to men. Simultaneously, women living with HIV are at increased risk for cardiovascular disease than HIV uninfected women and receive less guideline-based cardiovascular care. In order to provide better preventative, diagnostic, and curative care we have to understand why women living with HIV are at higher risk for cardiovascular disease and stroke and what we can do about it.

Women living with HIV are at higher risk for CVD and stroke

The reasons why women living with HIV are at higher risk for CVD and stroke are not entirely understood. However, scientists have described several likely reasons. HIV is an inflammatory disease and women infected with HIV have higher levels of inflammatory cytokines and markers of immune activation. In turn, this inflammation may increase the risk of CVD by accelerating development of atherosclerotic plaques and making these plaques more ‘vulnerable’ to rupture, causing more heart attacks and strokes. Additionally, we recently reported that inflammation was also associated with reduced cardiorespiratory fitness in adults living with HIV, which may help explain this increased risk. Women living with HIV have elevated rates of depression, obesity, stigma, and homelessness, also associated with increased CVD.

However, there are also unique biological factors that increase the risk for CVD in women living with HIV, particularly with aging. According to Dr. Sara Looby RN, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, hormone changes experienced during menopause such as estrogen loss and reduced ovarian reserve may negatively influence immune activation and the development of subclinical CVD in women living with HIV.  Her current study funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease is exploring this and the results are expected in the next 4 years.

Strategies to Reduce the risk of CVD in Women Living with HIV

Yet it is not enough to know there is a risk and even to partially understand why; health care providers- cardiologists, nurses, primary care providers, and HIV and emergency room physicians -chose their profession because they wanted to improve health. And all of us have an important role in helping women living with HIV accomplish this goal. There are several evidence-based strategies we can use to improve cardiovascular health in this population.

  • Take HIV medications. This strategy is well known among HIV nurses and physicians but those not trained in HIV may not realize the significance of HIV medications to reducing CVD in this population. Having a suppressed HIV viral load, obtained through adherence to effective HIV medicines, is consistently associated with reduced CVD.
  • Recognize and treat the cluster of traditional cardiovascular risk factors in HIV. Increased traditional cardiovascular risk factors in women living with HIV, including hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, and obesity, need to be effectively addressed using guideline-based care. For a good resource on how to do this, check out the American Heart Association’s Life Simple 7
  • Assess sex-specific risk factors in women including menopause history. This may not be routine for HIV, cardiovascular or family health providers but it is important for understanding cardiovascular risk. Increasing evidence indicates we should use a woman’s menopause history to improve understanding of her risk of CVD and provide good cardiovascular treatment. Other health conditions unique to women, such as a history of pre-eclampsia, can also influence risk and are recommended as “risk enhancers” in the most recent AHA Cholesterol Practice Guidelines.
  • Engage women in their cardiovascular health. While this may be the hardest strategy to implement, it is the most important because for so long, women living with HIV have focused on surviving HIV that they do not perceive they are at elevated CVD risk. Dr. Looby acknowledges, “It can be difficult to find time to do this given the competing demands of clinical care, but education is essential to empowering women living with HIV to become active participants in their care. Delivering education in plain language that is easily understood by patients. Asking patients basic questions like, “Do you know what heart disease is?” or “Do you know your cholesterol levels and what they mean?” can provide simple snap shots of important information that can be built upon at subsequent visits, or followed up by providing supplemental educational materials.” Through this patient-focused engagement women living with HIV will be able to take charge and reduce their blood pressure, cholesterol, weight, and smoking resulting in improved cardiovascular health.

Almost every minute a woman dies from heart disease. But they don’t have to. We are privileged to serve in a profession dedicated to improving the health of our fellow humans. But human health is complex and, for women living with HIV, we cannot just treat their HIV or their CVD or their depression or their symptoms of menopause- we have to treat these intertwining conditions together. There are countless barriers to doing this well, and as new models of delivering cardiovascular care in HIV are under investigation, I am confident we will learn how to do this better. In the meantime, we have start today and commit to implementing strategies in our own practice to improve the heart health of women living with HIV.

 

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Healthy Heart for Women

Kimble, Richelle. “Heart Attack Signs and Heart Facts.” Women's Lifestyle Magazine, 8 Apr. 2015, womenslifestyle.com/heart-attack-signs-and-heart-facts/.

Kimble, Richelle. “Heart Attack Signs and Heart Facts.” Women’s Lifestyle Magazine, 8 Apr. 2015, womenslifestyle.com/heart-attack-signs-and-heart-facts/.

As a pre-qualification exam graduate student, I have a full-time class schedule. As a part of my many class requirements, one that I am fulfilling this semester is general physiology. On February 1st in class we were ironically going over the cardiovascular system, which is also National Wear Red Day. Wear Red Day is an awareness campaign where women and men alike are encouraged to wear red in solidarity for women’s heart health. On this day at the University of Kentucky, where I am a graduate student, two professors in the Department of Pharmacology and Nutritional Sciences hosted the 5th Annual Healthy Hearts for Women Symposium. I know what you are thinking, “How does this relate to your physiology class?” Well, I volunteered and attended the event, however, I had to step out for an hour to attend my morning physiology course.

After spending weeks on basic heart anatomy and function, during this class period, we were finally moving on to cardiovascular pathophysiologies. On this day we learned many things but for some reason, the one concept that really resonated with me was the relationship between myocardial ischemia, atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction. Needless, to say it was a very interesting lecture. However, what made it even more interesting was the connection it had with the symposium. Upon returning to the symposium, Dr. Martha Gulati the Division Chief of Cardiology from the University of Arizona College of Medicine, was giving her talk on, “Women and Cardiovascular Disease: Is there really a sex difference?” I arrived late because of my class, but once I got settled into my seat you would never guess what slide she was currently showing — the development of a plaque in atherosclerosis! It was so exciting to me to have just learned this material and to now be in a talk describing the response of women in these disease states. Dr. Gulati brought up some very interesting points during her talk. Such as how the troponin levels during a heart attack in women are not always at levels comparable to men because women’s heart’s are smaller. When you think about it, you sort of say to yourself, “well yeah that makes sense,” however the sex-differences in diseased and even non-diseased states are not always apparent. When doing research, this is also why sex as a biological variable should be considered.

Overall, I would like to end with this quote that I felt summarized the post nicely: “In a generation that promotes equal opportunity for all genders, it’s crucial to not overlook the gender differences that affect health.” (Thompson 2019)1

For those of you conducting research, how are you incorporating sex into your studies?

 

References:

  1. Thompson, Elizabeth. “UK Hosts Annual Symposium for Promotion of Women’s Heart Health.” UKNow, University of Kentucky, 30 Jan. 2019, uknow.uky.edu/uk-healthcare/uk-hosts-annual-symposium-promotion-women-s-heart-health.