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Hypopituitarism and HIV-infection: a new comorbidity in the HAART era?

Journal article published in 2008 by L. Zirilli, G. Orlando, C. Diazzi, N. Squillace, C. Carani, G. Guaraldi, V. Rochira ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Several comorbidities are associated with the HIV infection and may involve also the endocrine-metabolic system. Consistently, the recent development of the therapeutic regimen highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) ruled out a significant improvement both in the prognosis and life expectancy of HIV-infected patients, but disclosed also new serious drug-related toxicity. Of these, the lipodystrophy syndrome is the most frequent, occurring in up to 83% of HIV-infected patients under HAART. The HIV-related lipodystrophy is associated with alterations in GH dynamics, affecting both basal and stimulated GH secretion. This GHIGF- I secretive pattern resembles that of severe GH deficiency in adulthood due to pituitary diseases, but without leading to IGF-I serum levels below the normal range. The impairment of pituitary GH secretion has been ascribed to the hormonal and metabolic inhibitory effect due to adipose tissue redistribution in HIV-infected males, since in these patients pituitary GH secretion appeared to be inversely related to visceral adipose tissue accumulation and waist to-hip-ratio. However, whether these patients suffer from a true GH deficiency due to an intrinsic pituitary failure or display only a functional reduction of GH secretion due to visceral adiposity remains still a matter of debate, especially in HIV-infected females.