AGING WITH HIV
Clinical implications of aging with HIV infection: perspectives and the future medical care agenda.
The increasing number of aging HIV-infected
(HIV+) persons comprises a unique population at risk for illnesses and
syndromes traditionally associated with the elderly. As a result, similar to
the current need for primary care providers to manage chronic noninfectious
comorbidities among aging persons with well controlled HIV infection, HIV
clinical care will need to routinely involve geriatric medicine in a new
HIV-geriatric discipline. The objective of this article is to provide a
conceptual framework in which HIV and geriatric management considerations for
healthcare professionals caring for HIV+ persons are integrated. The provision
of contemporary HIV clinical care extends well beyond the achievement of HIV
virologic suppression and antiretroviral therapy management and includes a need
for careful characterization of geriatric syndromes based upon functional
capacity and extent of disability. Screening for geriatric syndromes is both a
multidisciplinary and multidimensional process, designed to evaluate an older
person's functional ability, physical health, cognition, overall mental health,
and socio-environmental circumstances. Although routine incorporation of
geriatric assessment into clinical trials involving HIV+ persons is feasible, a
current challenge is the availability of a consensus clinical definition of
frailty or vulnerability. To maximize the efficiency, value, and convenience of
outpatient care visits for older HIV+ persons, these visits should include
encounters with multiple providers, including primary care clinicians, social
workers, and geriatricians. Challenges may exist in the routine provision of
these assessments to older HIV+ persons, but clearly such cross-disciplinary
collaboration will not only markedly enhance the care of aging HIV+ persons but
may also constitute a model of successful healthcare management that can be
applied to all aging persons with changing healthcare needs.
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