PTSD and its Associations with STIs – from Infection and Treatment to Morbidity and Mortality – among Veterans who Deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan Restricted; Files Only

Vyas, Kartavya (Fall 2023)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/j098zc50w?locale=es
Published

Abstract

One-quarter of the 2.5 million Veterans who deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan post-9/11 are thought to have posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); many of whom may go on to develop other medical conditions of concern, including sexually transmitted infections (STIs). We aim to address a knowledge gap in the extant scientific literature for wartime Veterans and to help inform the care of all those with PTSD more broadly; of particular interest are Veterans with HIV (VWH).

In Aim 1 – Infection, Joinpoint regression models and marginal structural models were fitted to examine trends in PTSD and STI diagnoses, estimate the associations between PTSD and STI incidence, measure effect modification by number of deployments and combat exposure, and explore how these associations varied over time in a prospective cohort of all Veterans who deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and received care in the VA between 7 October 2001 and 31 December 2022 (n=1,570,654). We found PTSD increased the rates of all STIs examined – chlamydia, genital HSV, gonorrhea, HBV, HCV, HIV, HPV, and syphilis.

In Aim 2 – Treatment, marginal structural models were fitted to estimate the associations between PTSD and HIV treatment non-adherence, modifications, and adverse outcomes; measure effect modification by number of deployments and combat exposure; and explore how these associations varied over time in a prospective cohort of all VWH on treatment who deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and received care in the VA between 7 October 2001 and 31 December 2022 (n=3,206). We found PTSD increased the risk of HIV treatment non-adherence and the rate of HIV treatment modifications but was not associated with adverse outcomes.

In Aim 3 – Morbidity and Mortality, marginal structural models were fitted to estimate the associations between PTSD and 10 age-related comorbidities, multimorbidity, and all-cause mortality; measure effect modification by number of deployments and combat exposure; and explore how these associations varied over time in a prospective cohort of all VWH on treatment who deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and received care in the VA between 7 October 2001 and 31 December 2022 (n=3,206). We found PTSD increased the risks of AIDS, arthritis, CKD, COPD, CVD, and multimorbidity but was not associated with asthma, cancer, CeVD, DM, liver disease, or mortality.

Individuals with PTSD have higher risks of STIs, treatment non-adherence, and some comorbid conditions. Results underscore the need for routine PTSD screening so that providers can better identify patients at increased risk of adverse outcomes and possibly mitigate these risks by referring them to risk reduction counseling or treatment advocacy programs.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction

Specific aims

Aim 1 – Infection

Aim 2 – Treatment

Aim 3 – Morbidity and mortality

Systematic literature review

Background

Aim 1 – Infection

Aim 2 – Treatment

Aim 3 – Morbidity and mortality

References

Chapter 2: Overview of methods

Multiple imputation

Marginal structural models

Inverse probability treatment weights

Estimation of IPTWs

Inverse probability of censoring weights

Estimation of IPCWs

Estimation of final weights

Robust variance estimators

Assumptions

Interaction assessment

References

Chapter 3: PTSD and its associations with STIs among Veterans

Abstract

Key Points

Question

Findings

Meaning

Introduction

Methods

Study population

Data sources

Definitions

Descriptive analyses

Trend analyses

Inferential analyses

Results

Characteristics

Trends

Overall associations

Effect modification

Discussion

Conflicts of interest and source of funding

Author contributions

Acknowledgements

References

Chapter 4: PTSD and its associations with ART among Veterans with HIV

Abstract

Introduction

Methods

Study population

Data sources

Definitions

Descriptive analyses

Inferential analyses

Results

Characteristics

ART non-adherence

ART modifications

Treatment failure

Discussion

Author contributions

Declaration of interests

Data sharing

Acknowledgements

References

Chapter 5: PTSD and its associations with morbidity and mortality among Veterans with HIV

Abstract

Research in context

Evidence before this study

Added value of this study

Implications of all the available evidence

Introduction

Methods

Study population

Data sources

Definitions

Descriptive analyses

Inferential analyses

Results

Characteristics

Overall associations

Effect modification

Discussion

Author contributions

Declaration of interests

Data sharing

Acknowledgements

References

Chapter 6: Discussion

Major findings

Strengths and limitations

Potential impact

References

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