Title: Workshop HIV
1Workshop HIV co-infection
- Dr.K.Torpey Director of Family Health
Int,Lusaka, Zambia - Dr. M. Siwale Pediatrician, Lusaka Trust
Hospital, Lusaka, Zambia - Dr. S.Geelen Pediatric Infect Dis,
CCPD/PharmAccess Foundation, Amsterdam Univ Med
Center Utrecht, The Netherlands
The sponsors disclaim any liability for the
content of the presentation.
2 3Case Mr F
- 18 year-old-man
- complains about headache for the past few weeks
- mild fever
- vomits now and then
- Tested for HIV last week positive
- Has panicked, and thinks he will die
4Case Mr F
- Physical examination
- Young man in good physical health
- Mild neck stiffness
5Lab
- Hb 8.0 g/dL
- WBC 5.4 x 103/microl
- Liver function normal
- CD4 cells 43/mm3
What is your differential diagnosis? Additional
tests?
6Differential Diagnosis
- CNS infection Cryptococcal meningitis
Bacterial meningitis Tuberculous meningitis
Toxoplasmosis Other - Other CNS abnormality Malignancy Vascular
event
7- Cerebrospinal fluid
- White cells 43, 90 lymphocytes
- Protein 71 mg/dL
- Indian ink positive
8- Diagnosis
- Cryptococcal meningitis
- HIV WHO stage 4
- Treatment plan?
- For OI and HIV?
9Cryptococcal meningitis
- 5-8 of patients in US W-Europe
- Frequency higher in resource limited settings,
reason unclear - Most frequent cause of meningitis in patients
with HIV - Particularly if CD4 lt 100/mm3
10Cryptococcal meningitis
- Subacute course
- fever, headache, fatigue
- mental changes
- visual changes
- seizures
- Physical examination
- fever
- variable signs of meningismus and obtundation
11Cryptococcal meningitis
- CSF
- Increased intracranial pressure is common
- Usually mild pleiocytosis, mainly lymphocytes
- Increased protein
- Indian ink sensitivity 60-80
- Cryptococcal Antigen test sensitivity gt 95
12Mr F receives
- Fluconazole IV 800mg/day for 2 weeks
- Followed by oral 400mg/day for 8 weeks
- At the end of the treatment, Indian ink is
negative - Secondary prophylaxis oral fluconazole 200mg/day
- Is this therapy a good choice?
13Treatment Cryptococcal Meningitis
- 3 phases
- Induction 2 weeks, consolidation 6-8 weeks,
maintenance (for life but if on ARV until CD4
gt100-200 for 6 months) - Most effective Amphotericin B ( 5
Flucytosine)Alternative Fluconazole - Lumbar taps if elevated intracranial pressure
- (gt 20 cm) (usually remove 20ml/session)
- Consider medical treatment for increased
intracranial pressure if Lumbar puncture
contraindicated (dexamethason plus mannitol).
14After 6 weeks Mr F starts HAARTd4T, 3TC and
NVPTiming and regimen OK?
15- Best time to start HAART in patient with advanced
immunodeficiency and cryptococcal meningitis is
not known - First treat OI
- Need for delay in initiating HAART after
diagnosis and treatment of cryptococcosis?
16- Follow-up 2 weeks later
- Good clinical condition, no complaints
- ALT 101 U/ml (nlt50)
- Cause?
- Strategy?
17- Cause increased ALAT?
- Drug-related?most likely candidates
nevirapine fluconazole - Other (e.g infection)
18- You decide to switch to efavirenz
- Is this a good choice?
19- Two weeks later Mr F is admitted with mild fever
and a cranial nerve paralysis - What is your differential diagnosis?
- What will be your strategy?
20Diagnostic problem
- Relapse of cryptococcal meningitis?
- IRIS?
- New OI?
- Vascular event?
- Other?
21Therapeutic dilemma
- Stop or continue HAART?
- Stop or change OI therapy?
- Add immunosuppressive or anti-inflammatory
drugs?
22Follow-up Case Mr F
- CSF high pressure (28 cm), no cryptococci
detected - IRIS?
- Treatment
- restart high dose fluconazole
- continuation of HAART
- steroids???
23Cryptococcal IRIS
- Usually CNS diseaseSometimes other
manifestations - Can be severe
Lortholary AIDS 2005, Shelburne CID 2005
24 25CASE Mr K
- 27 years old
- Born in Gabon
- Herpes Zoster 1 year ago
- Current complaint fatigue, weight loss, bouts
of fever for the last few months
26- Physical examination
- Patient appears ill, T 39C
- Weight 42 kg, height 175 cm
- Scars of thoracic herpes zoster
- Heart lungs normal
- Abdominal examination normal
27- What laboratory tests will you request?
28- Lab
- Hb 9.0 g/dL, WBC 6.2 x 109/ml, platelets 256 x
109/ml - HIV rapid test positive
- CD4 185/mm3
- Chest X ray to follow
29(No Transcript)
30Your differential diagnosis?
31Differential diagnosis
- Infection
- - M tuberculosis
- - Other infection causing lymphadenopathy
- Malignancy
- - Lymphoma
- - Kaposis sarcoma
32Your treatment strategy?
- In case of sputum smear
- Positive for acid fast bacilli
- Negative for acid fast bacilli
-
33How to exclude TB before starting ARV?
- Be aware in patients with chronic fever, cough,
lymphadenopathies, weight loss, and Hb lt 8 g/dL - Chest X-ray, AFB sputum
- Do not delay starting ARV if nothing found, but
do very close clinical monitoring
34Treatment plan
- Patient has positive sputum smears
- Start TB treatment
- Start Cotrimoxazol prophylaxis
- HAART
- when to start?
- which regimen?
35HIV TB
- Optimal time to start HAART in patients treated
for TB unknown - Balance between risk of progression versus
- intolerance of regimen
- difficulty to adhere
- drug-drug interactions
36When to start HAART in TB patients
- Options
- start HAART and TB treatment together
- start HAART after acute, rifampicine containing
phase e.g. 2 months - start HAART after the end of TB treatment
- Remember
- HAART initiation is not an emergency
37TB when to start?
- Treat TB and follow-up
- Treat TB, after two months consider HAART
- Treat TB and start HAART after 2 weeks - 2 months
- CD4 gt 350 ?
- CD4 200-350 ?
- CD4 lt 200 ?
Remember Timing of HAART should be based on
clinical judgement. For extrapulmonary TB ASAP
WHO 2005
38Case Mr K contd
- Patient starts TB treatment
- How long will you continue TB-treatment in this
patient?
39Case Mr K after 4 weeks TB treatment
- Improved clinical condition
- No fever
- Weight 1.5 kg
- Who would start and who would wait?
- What regimen would you choose?
40Case Mr K
- You decide to start HAART
- AZT 300 mg twice daily
- 3TC 150 mg twice daily
- Efavirenz 800 mg once daily
- Do you agree with this choice?
41Dose of Efavirenz (EFV) in case of
co-administration with rifampicin
- Rifampicin decreases level of EFV by 25
- Optimal dose of EFV not really known ?
- Best strategy still unknown
- Some advise to increase EFV does to 800 mg in
patients gt 50 kg - Others use regular dose EFV 600 mg
-
42- What if TB develops in a patient under HAART?
- Adapt HAART as necessary to avoid drug
interactions
43Case Mr K contd
- After 2 months fever returns
- What is your differential diagnosis and what
would you do?
44Causes of clinical worsening during TB treatment
and HAART
- Most likely
- Immune response inflammatory syndrome?
(paradoxical reactions ) - Be aware of
- Drug-resistant TB
- Other (opportunistic) infections
- Adherence
- Drug interactions
45IRIS in TB HIV co-infection
- Mean onset of symptoms is 2 weeks
- Mean duration of symptoms is 3 weeks
- Most common symptoms include
- fever
- cervical lymphadenopathy
- intrathoracic lymphadenopathy
- Other manifstations have included
- focal cerebritis
- pulmonary disease / pleural effusions
- hepatospenomegaly
46TB HIV IRIS management
- No evidence based guidelines available yet
- Continue HAART if tolerated (but may need to
stop if very severe!) - Switch regimen if needed
- Continue TB medication
- Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents may help
- Add steroids if needed
- especially in case of severe dyspnea, TB
meningitis - high dose prednisone (1 mg/kg for 1-2 weeks,
followed by tapering doses)
47Case Mr K contd
- Good adherence
- Other opportunistic infections not likely
- Symptomatic treatment
- Continuation of all medications
- Resolution of fevers and adenopathy in 3 weeks
48Case Mr G
49Case Mr G
- Male 24 years
- HIV infected, diagnosed 5 years ago,
- Medical historyÂ
- Recurrent oral candidiasis
- TB (treatment completed)
- Currently ARV naive
- Physical examination ? No abnormalities
50Case Mr G
- Decreasing CD4
- Recent value 180/mm3 ? indication HAART
- Basic laboratory evaluation
- Full blood count normal
- Creatinin normal
- Liver ALT 125 U/l
Conclusion?
51Hepatitis?Possible causes?
52Hepatitis
- Infection (HBV, HCV, opportunistic infection)
- Drug toxicity
- Alcohol
- Steatosis
- Auto-immune
- Malignancy
- Other
53- Which additional diagnostic investigations are
available in your setting to evaluate further
the cause of the hepatitis?
54Parameters used to assess liver damage
- ALT
- Hepatitis serology
- Liver histology
- In resource rich settings also HBV and HCV-PCR
55Patient Mr G Hepatitis serology
Hepatitis A IgG positive Hepatitis C IgG
negative
Conclusion?
56Conclusion
- HIV and HBV co-infection
- Possible chronic active hepatitis
Patient refuses liver biopsy HBV-DNA-PCR not
available
57- Consequences of HIV HB co-infection?
58Hepatitis B HIV co-infection
- In HIV-infected person ?
- Increased risk of chronicity after HBV exposure
- Enhanced HBV replication levels may result in
progression of more severe liver fibrosis - Increased risk of HBV-associated end-stage liver
disease if chronic HBV infection is present
Soriano et al, AIDS 2005, p 221
59Prevention
- If the individual has been at risk for Hepatitis
B infection, which is the case for many
HIV-infected patients, then HBV serologic status
should be determined - Those who are seronegative should be offered
immunization.
60Case Mr G contd
Your treatment strategy?
Remember HAART was indicated in this patient
61If possible choose regimen with agents active
against both infections
- Which antiviral agents are active against both
HIV and HBV?
62Agents with anti-HIV plus anti-HBV activity
- Nucleoside analogues
- Lamivudine 300 mg a dayEmtricitabine 200 mg a
day - Lamivudine and emtricitabine are
interchangeable, not additive because of low
genetic barrier for HIV resistance - Nucleotide analoguesTenofovir 300 mg a day
63HIV-HBV co-infection and HAART indicated
Preferred combination (if available) Tenofovir
Lamivudine 3rd antiretroviral
agent or Tenofovir Emtricitabine 3rd
antiretroviral agent
Soriano et al, AIDS 2005, p 221
64HIV-HBV co-infectionHAART not yet indicated
- Best strategy not really known
- Consider anti-HBV therapy if evidence of liver
disease - In resource rich settings agents with activity
against HBV but not against HIV are used (e.g.
interferon) - If no specific anti-HBV agents are
availablechoose between watchful waiting
strategyorconsider initiating HAART with agents
active against HIV plus HBV
Soriano et al, AIDS 2005, p 221
65Caution
- Do not use lamivudine or emtricitabine
monotherapy - ?
- HIV resistance mutations will be selected rapidly
- HBV resistance mutations will also be selected,
albeit more slowly
66Is hepatoxicity of HAART a problem in
HIV-HBV-co-infected patients?
67Hepatotoxicity of HAART in HIV-HBV co-infected
patients
- Liver enzyme elevations after initiation of
HAART are more frequent in patients with chronic
hepatitis B infection -
68Hepatotoxicity of HAART
- Significant hepatoxicity occurs in 5-10
- of HIV-positive individuals initiating HAART
- Causes of hepatoxicity may differ
- Direct injury from prescribed drugs
- Immune reconstitution phenonema
- Allergy/hypersensitivity
69Hepatotoxicity of HAART in HIV-HBV co-infected
patients
- Use drugs with more hepatotoxic profiles with
caution e.g. - Nevirapine
- Efavirenz
- Full-dose ritonavir
-
70Whether to continue or discontinue drugs depends
on most likely cause
- Direct toxicity - antiretroviral drug suspected ?
discontinue suspected drug - Immune reconstitution most likely ? continue as
long as patient remains asymptomatic and
transaminase levels do not rise above 10 times
the upper limit of normal (grade 4 toxicity) - Hypersensitivity suspected ? liver enzyme
elevations often seen in context of a more
generalized reaction ? discontinue suspected drug
e.g. nevirapine, abacavir
71Remember
- Carefully choose
- When to start anti-HIV and/or anti-HBV therapy
- Which drugs to use
- Carefully monitor for hepatotoxic side effects