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HIV infection and COVID-19 death
Working on behalf of NHS England, this paper used the OpenSAFELY platform to investigate the association between HIV infection and COVID-19 mortality.
The Lancet HIV, 2020
Abstract
Background
Whether HIV infection is associated with risk of death due to COVID-19 is unclear. We aimed to investigate this association in a large-scale population-based study in England.
Methods
We did a retrospective cohort study. Working on behalf of NHS England, we used the OpenSAFELY platform to analyse routinely collected electronic primary care data linked to national death registrations. We included all adults (aged ≥18 years) alive and in follow-up on Feb 1, 2020, and with at least 1 year of continuous registration with a general practitioner before this date. People with a primary care record for HIV infection were compared with people without HIV. The outcome was COVID-19 death, defined as the presence of International Classification of Diseases 10 codes U07.1 or U07.2 anywhere on the death certificate. Cox regression models were used to estimate the association between HIV infection and COVID-19 death; they were initially adjusted for age and sex, then we added adjustment for index of multiple deprivation and ethnicity, and then for a broad range of comorbidities. Interaction terms were added to assess effect modification by age, sex, ethnicity, comorbidities, and calendar time.
Results
17 282 905 adults were included, of whom 27 480 (0·16%) had HIV recorded. People living with HIV were more likely to be male, of Black ethnicity, and from a more deprived geographical area than the general population. 14 882 COVID-19 deaths occurred during the study period, with 25 among people with HIV. People living with HIV had higher risk of COVID-19 death than those without HIV after adjusting for age and sex: hazard ratio (HR) 2·90 (95% CI 1·96–4·30; p<0·0001). The association was attenuated, but risk remained high, after adjustment for deprivation, ethnicity, smoking and obesity: adjusted HR 2·59 (95% CI 1·74–3·84; p<0·0001). There was some evidence that the association was larger among people of Black ethnicity: HR 4·31 (95% CI 2·42–7·65) versus 1·84 (1·03–3·26) in non-Black individuals (p-interaction=0·044).
Interpretation
People with HIV in the UK seem to be at increased risk of COVID-19 mortality. Targeted policies should be considered to address this raised risk as the pandemic response evolves.
- Krishnan Bhaskaran,
- Christopher Rentsch,
- Brian MacKenna,
- Anna Schultze,
- Amir Mehrkar,
- Chris Bates,
- Rosalind Eggo,
- Caroline Morton,
- Seb Bacon,
- Peter Inglesby,
- Ian Douglas,
- Alex Walker,
- Helen McDonald,
- Jonathan Cockburn,
- Elizabeth Williamson,
- Dave Evans,
- Harriet Forbes,
- Helen Curtis,
- Will Hulme,
- John Parry,
- Frank Hester,
- Sam Harper,
- Stephen Evans,
- Liam Smeeth,
- Ben Goldacre