Title: HIV Associated Opportunistic Infections in Ethiopia
1HIV Associated Opportunistic Infections in
Ethiopia
- Daniel Fekade MD, MSc
- Faculty of Medicine, Addis Ababa University
2HIV ASSOCIATED OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS
- Opportunistic infections are major causes of
morbidity mortality among HIV infected patients - Many of the common opportunistic infections are
both preventable/treatable - However, inadequate infrastructures make it
difficult to implement prevention/treatment
programs in many developing countries
3Major diagnostic categories among 237 HIV
infected medical inpatients Tikur Anbessa
Hospital, Addis Ababa, Jan-Dec, 2000.
- Diagnoses, (Number of patients), Percent of total
-
- Oropharyngeal candidiasis (136), 57.4
- Tuberculosis (131), 55.3
- CNS mass lesion (74), 31.2
- Sepsis (59), 24.9
4Major diagnostic categories of HIV infected
patients (contd.)
- Pneumocystis pneumonia (34) 14.3
- Bacterial pneumonia (22) 9.3
- Kaposi's sarcoma (20) 8.4
5Major diagnostic categories of HIV infected
patients (contd.)
- AIDS dementia (14) 5.9
- Cryptococcal meningitis (14) 5.9
- Peripheral neuropathy (11) 4.6
- Myelopathy (11) 4.6
- Lymphoma (7) 3.0
- Others (82) 34.6
6Causes of hospital death among HIV positive
medical inpatients.
- In hospital mortality rate (70) 30
- Cause of death (Number of patients) Percent of
total () - Tuberculosis (41) 56.2
- Sepsis (41) 56.2
- CNS mass lesion (26) 35.6
7Causes of hospital death among HIV medical
inpatients (contd.)
- Bacterial pneumonia (10) 13.7
- Pneumocystis pneumonia (8) 11
- Cryptococcal meningitis (6) 8
- Others(16) 21.9
- Unknown (4) 5.5
8Management of HIV- associated tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis is the leading opportunistic
infection in persons infected with HIV in
developing countries. - HIV seroprevalence among tuberculosis patients in
Ethiopia estimated to be 44 (MOH, unpublished
report 1994) - 5-10 of HIV seropositive patients develop
active disease annually (cf. 5 cumulative
lifelong risk in seronegatives).
9Clinical presentation of tuberculosis among 131
HIV infected patients
- Prevalence of TBc among HIV medical inpatients,
(131/237) 55.3 -
- Disseminated TBc (66/131) 50.4
- Pulmonary TB (37/131) 27
-
- Smear positive (8/37) 21.8
- Smear negative(29/37) 78.4
- Meningitis (11) 8.4
10Clinical presentation of tuberculosis among 131
HIV infected patients (contd.)
- Lymphnode (5) 3.8
- Pleural(5) 3.8
- Tuberculoma (4) 3.1
- Spondylitis (3) 2.3
11Problems in the management of HIV associated
tuberculosis
- High incidence of adverse drug reactions (18 vs.
5) - Atypical presentation/extra pulmonary disease
- Resistance to any one or more of the first line
anti-TB drugs in Ethiopia, 15 - 33 - MDR TB, resistance to both rifampicin and INH,
among previously untreated patients 5
12Preventive therapy against tuberculosis in people
living with HIV
- Progression to active disease in persons latently
infected, 3.5-9.7 per 100 person years relative
risk 20 - TB prophylaxis increases survival of HIV infected
persons at risk of TB e.g. persons residing in
endemic regions. - INH preventive therapy for a year costs US 5.15
affordable - However, inadequate infrastructures make it
difficult to be practicable
13HIV Associated Cryptococcal Meningitis
- Clinical presentation
- Occurs in persons with advanced immunodeficiency,
CD4 lt100/µl - Subtle clinical presentation, headache, fever,
malaise absent meningeal signs - Altered sensorium in 25, and focal signs 5
14HIV Associated Cryptococcal Meningitis
- Diagnosis
- CSF, Indian ink/culture yield about 75
- Cryptococcal antigen assays, CSF/serum
- Blood culture
15HIV Associated Cryptococcal Meningitis
- Treatment
- Induction Amphotericine B 0.7-1mg/kg/day IV,
- With/without flu cytosine 100mg/kg/day PO for 14
days, - Consolidation fluconazole 400mg/day for 8-10
weeks, - Maintenance fluconazole 200mg/day, lifelong.
16Management of Toxoplasmosis in Patients with HIV
Infection
- Epidemiology
- Toxoplasma gondii is a zoonotic infection
- Cats are the definitive hosts, and excrete T
gondii oocysts in their feces - T gondii cysts are found in undercooked meat
- Prevalence of latent T gondii infection is high
in Ethiopia 85 seropositive for anti-toxoplasma
antibodies.
17Toxoplasmosis, clinical presentation
- Typical presentation is an altered mental state,
seizures, weakness, and cranial nerve
abnormalities - Onset is usually subacute, nearly 90 of cases
develop focal neurologic signs - Commonly affected areas, basal ganglia, brain
stem and cerebellum - Extracranial sites may occur, retina, myocardium,
and lungs
18Diagnosis of toxoplasmosis
- Neuro- radiologic imaging
- Contrast enhanced CT, hypodense multiple lesions
with ring-enhancement after IV contrast - Solitary lesions present with diagnostic
difficulties - Therapeutic trial, clinical / radiological
response in two to three weeks
19Toxoplasmosis, diagnosis (contd.)
- Serologic assays
- A negative Toxoplasma antibody test makes the
diagnosis of toxoplasmosis less likely. - Histologic diagnosis
- Brain biopsy Wright-Giemsa, fluorescent antibody
staining
20Management of toxoplasma encephalitis
- Two major regimens
- Pyrimethamine plus sulfadiazine
- OR
- Pyrimethamine plus clindamycin
- both with folinic acid
- duration of treatment six weeks
- Suppressive/maintenance treatment continued for
life
21Management of toxoplasmosis (contd.)
- High rates of adverse reactions with
pyrimethamine-sulfadiazine - Experimental therapies azithromycin,
clarithromycin, trimetrexate, doxycycline,
atovaquoune - Corticosteroids may be used in patients with
cerebral edema and increased intracranial
pressure.
22Preventive therapies for toxoplasmosis
- Indications
- CD4 count lt 100 cells/µl
- Positive T gondii serology
- Regimens
- TMP-SMX two tablets per day (single strength)
- Alternative regimens
- Dapsone 50mg daily, plus pyrimethamine 50 mg po
weekly
23The management Pneumocystis pneumonia in patients
with HIV infection
- Epidemiology
- PCP is the most frequent opportunistic infection
in industrialized countries, but less frequent in
Africa. - Infection transmitted from human to human, or
from environmental reservoirs to humans. - Antibody studies suggest that most humans are
infected early in life - Infection transient, or long lived with periods
of latency?
24Pneumocystis pneumonia, Clinical presentation
- Onset, subacute
- Dyspnea, non-productive cough, fever
- Chest X-rays diffuse bilateral interstitial
infiltrates - Numerous examples atypical radiographic
presentations e.g. unilateral infiltrates,
cavities, effusions - Hypoxemia, and elevated serum LDH
25Pneumocystis pneumonia, diagnosis
- Demonstration of the organism in bronchoalveolar
lavage (BAL), sensitivity 95-100 - Induced sputum, sensitivity 30-90
- Pulmonary biopsy, sensitivity 90-95, reserved
for unusual cases - Staining Wright-Giemsa, methenamine silver,
direct immunoflourescence
26Treatment of pneumocystis pneumonia
- TMP-SMX is the gold standard for the treatment of
PCP - It can be given either IV, or PO
- Usual dose, 15mg/kg/day (based on the
trimethoprim component) in 3-4 divided doses for
14 days (typical oral dosage 2 DS tid). - Adverse drug reactions in 25-50, primarily skin
rash /- fever - Patients with moderate/severe disease should
receive corticosteroids
27Pneumocystis pneumonia, alternative regimens
- Clindamycin 600 mg IV q8h or 300-450 mg PO q6h
primaquine 30 mg base/day, 21 days - Pentamidine 4 mg/kg/day IV, 21 days (usually
reseved for severe cases) - Atovaquone 750 mg suspension PO with bid, 21 days
28Pneumocystis pneumonia, preventive therapies
- Prevention is strongly recommended for HIV
infected person with significant immune
deficiency - Indications
- CD4 count lt 200/µl
- Prior episode of PCP
- HIV associated thrush
- Unexplained fever
29Preventive therapy, pneumocytis pneumnia
- Regimens
- TMP-SMX two tablets/day (single strength)
- TMP-SMX two tablets three times per week
- Alternative regimens
- Dapsone 100 mg PO daily
- Dapsone 50 mg PO daily, plus pyrimethamine 50 mg
PO weekly, plus leucovirin25 mg Po weekly - Aerosolized pentamidine 300 mg monthly via
nebulizer - Atovaqoune 1500 mg daily