Background: Hypertriglyceridaemia and insulin resistance are common in HIV-infected patients treated with protease inhibitors, particularly in those with lipodystrophy. Whether a therapeutic approach addressed to those metabolic abnormalities may have any impact on body fat is not clear.
Methods: Patients on stable antiretroviral therapy containing protease inhibitors, with abdominal obesity defined by increased waist-to-hip ratio, and plasma triglycerides >200 mg/dl, were randomized to receive blind medication consisting of metformin 850 mg, gemfibrozil 600 mg or placebo every 12 h for 1 year. Weight, height, waist and hip were measured, and fasting blood analyses, including at least CD4 cell count, plasma HIV-1 RNA, lactate, glucose, insulin, triglycerides, total, HDL and LDL cholesterol were performed at baseline and every 3 months. An oral glucose tolerance test, and assessments of total and regional fat by bioimpedance analysis and sonography, respectively, were also done at baseline, 6 and 12 months.
Results: One-hundred-and-eight patients were randomized to placebo (n=36), gemfibrozil (n=37) or metformin (n=35). There was absolute loss of total and regional fat in the three arms without significant changes in the waist-to-hip ratio. However, the loss of fat in patients on gemfibrozil was significantly lower than in patients on placebo. No patient discontinued study drugs due to adverse effects.
Conclusion: In this population of HIV-infected patients, there was a loss of fat along time. The finding of relative preservation of fat associated with gemfibrozil therapy deserves further investigation in the search of potential effective therapies for lipodystrophy in HIV-infected subjects.