Predictors of hippocampal tauopathy in people with and at risk for human immunodeficiency virus infection

J Neurovirol. 2023 Dec;29(6):647-657. doi: 10.1007/s13365-023-01181-9. Epub 2023 Nov 5.

Abstract

Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) has extended lifespans of people living with HIV (PWH), increasing both the risk for age-related neuropathologies and the importance of distinguishing effects of HIV and its comorbidities from neurodegenerative disorders. The accumulation of hyperphosphorylated tau (p-tau) in hippocampus is a common degenerative change, with specific patterns of hippocampal subfield vulnerability observed in different disease contexts. Currently, associations between chronic HIV, its comorbidities, and p-tau burden and distribution in the hippocampus are unexplored. We used immunohistochemistry with antibody AT8 to analyze hippocampal p-tau in brain tissues of PWH (n = 71) and HIV negative controls (n = 25), for whom comprehensive clinical data were available. Using a morphology-based neuroanatomical segmentation protocol, we annotated digital slide images to measure percentage p-tau areas in the hippocampus and its subfields. Factors predicting p-tau burden and distribution were identified in univariate analyses, and those with significance at p ≤ 0.100 were advanced to multivariable regression. The patient sample had a mean age of 61.5 years. Age predicted overall hippocampal p-tau burden. Subfield p-tau predictors were for Cornu Ammonis (CA)1, age; for CA2 and subiculum, seizure history; for CA3, seizure history and head trauma; and for CA4/dentate, history of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. In this autopsy sample, hippocampal p-tau burden and distribution were not predicted by HIV, viral load, or immunologic status, with viral effects limited to associations between HCV and CA4/dentate vulnerability. Hippocampal p-tau pathologies in cART-era PWH appear to reflect age and comorbidities, but not direct effects of HIV infection.

Keywords: Comorbidities; Hippocampus; Human immunodeficiency virus; Tauopathy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • HIV Infections* / complications
  • HIV Infections* / pathology
  • Hepatitis C* / pathology
  • Hippocampus / pathology
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging / methods
  • Middle Aged
  • Seizures / pathology
  • Tauopathies* / pathology