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1 Issues and Controversies in Initiation of
Antiretroviral Therapy
Constance A. Benson, MD
CA Benson, MD, June 2001
2When To Start Antiretroviral Therapy
- Current Controversy Weighing benefit/risk for
asymptomatic patients with CD4 T cell counts
between 200 and 500 cells/µL - Low to moderate risk of disease progression
- Moderate risk of complications of therapy,
including - - Poor adherence
- - Development of drug resistance
- - Short- and long-term toxicities
3Risk of Progression to AIDS (1987 Definition) in
3 years by Baseline CD4 Count and HIV RNA
Adapted from Mellors et al, Science 19962721167
4Benefits and Potential Risks of Early Therapy
- Benefits
- Control of viral replication easier to
achieve/maintain - Delay or prevention of immunodeficiency
- Lower risk of resistance
- Decreased risk of HIV transmission
- Risks
- Drug-related reduction in quality of life
- Greater cumulative drug-related adverse events
- Development of drug resistance in those with poor
adherence - Limitation of future treatment options
Adapted from DHHS Guidelines, February 2001
5Benefits and Potential Risks of Delayed Therapy
- Benefits
- Avoid negative effects on quality of life
- Avoid drug-related adverse events
- Delay in development of drug resistance
- Preserve maximum number of drug options when HIV
disease risk is highest
- Risks
- Possible risk of immune system depletion
- Possible greater difficulty in suppressing viral
replication - Possible increased risk of HIV transmission
Adapted from DHHS Guidelines, February 2001
6CD4 Cell Rise is Greater the Earlier in Disease
ART is Initiated
Adapted from Swiss Cohort Study, Lancet, 1999
7Rationale for Earlier Initiation of Therapy
- Decreased risk of HIV transmission
- Viral load in genital secretions is greatly
reduced in those receiving potent antiretroviral
therapy - Modeling studies suggest broad treatment with
reductions in viral load of infected individuals
will decrease the number of new infections
(Science, 2000) - Effect may be tempered by an increased risk of
transmission of drug-resistant virus by treated
patients who are incompletely suppressed
8CD4 Count is Better than Plasma HIV-1 RNA in
Determining When to Initiate HAART
- Retrospective review of the risk of a new OI or
death based on CD4 count and viral load at
initiation of HAART - 1162 patients followed up at Johns Hopkins
- Median time of therapy - 533 days
- Viral load prior to initiation of therapy was not
associated with risk of disease progression but
CD4 count was - CD4 at HAART Hazard Ratio (95 CI P
value) - CD4 lt 200 4.3 (2.6, 7.2 P lt 0.0001)
- CD4 201-350 1.6 (0.9, 2.9 P
0.11) - CD4 351-500 1.0
-
Adapted from T Sterling et al, 8th CROI
9Later Initiation of Antiretroviral Therapy is
Associated with Increased Risk of Death
- CDC Adult Spectrum of Disease Project record
review of 5,110 persons starting 2- or 3-drug
antiretroviral therapy - CD4 at HAART 2-yr Survival Hazard Ratio
(95 CI) - 0 - 49 64.8 5.5 (3.0, 10.1)
- 50 - 99 78.1 3.6 (1.9, 6.8)
- 100 - 149 86.1 2.7 (1.4, 5.2)
- 150 - 199 89.9 2.3 (1.1, 4.7)
- 200 - 249 95.7 1.9 (0.9, 3.8)
- 250 - 299 93.7 1.9 (0.9, 3.9)
- 300 - 349 92.8 1.8 (0.9, 3.7)
- 350 - 399 96.3 1.1 (0.5, 2.4)
Adapted from J Kaplan et al, 8th CROI
10Clinical Benefit of Initiation of HAART in Pts
with Asymptomatic HIV infection and CD4 Count
gt350/?L
- Treatment-naïve patients with CD4 gt 350/µL
starting HAART matched to untreated controls
(Swiss HIV Cohort Study) - Median follow-up of 2.1 years for 363 cases and
1.3 years for 363 controls - Hazard ratio for progression to a CDC Class B or
C event was 0.15 for cases versus controls and
mortality was 1.1 versus 3.3 - However, HAART treatment associated with
treatment interruptions in 44.6, intolerance in
17.9, and virologic failure in some patients
Adapted from Opravil et al, 8th CROI
11Rationale for Later Initiation of Therapy
- Treatment regimens are complex and difficult to
tolerate gt incomplete adherence gt drug
resistance, limiting future treatment options, ie
burn through available drugs too quickly - 90-95 adherence to nRTI/PI regimen required to
achieve/maintain full suppression (Paterson DL,
et al. Ann Intern Med, 2000)
12Correlation Between Adherence to ARV Therapy and
VL lt 400 (at 12 weeks)
Proportion with VL lt 400/mL
Adherence (MEMS Caps)
Adapted from Ann Intern Med 2000
13Impact of Adherence on Antiretroviral Regimen
Failure
- SAT GROUP study medication was self-administered
following written and verbal instructions and
adherence counseling - DOT GROUP study medication was given under the
supervision of a nurse who dispensed and observed
subjects swallow the medication
Adapted from Fischl et al, 8th CROI, 2001
14Rationale for Later Initiation of Therapy
- Emerging complications of ART may have short- and
long-term effects on future health - Pancreatitis
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Hyperlipidemia
- Body fat distribution abnormalities
- Hyperglycemia
- Lactic acidosis
- Osteopenia/osteoporosis
15Indications for Initiation of Antiretroviral
Therapy
- Clinical Category CD4 Cells/µL HIV RNA
Recommendation - Copies/mL
- Symptomatic Any Any Treat
- Asymptomatic
- (AIDS) lt 200 Any Treat
- Asymptomatic 200-350 Any Generally Treat
- Asymptomatic gt 350 gt 55,000 Generally
Treat - Asymptomatic gt 350 lt 55,000 Generally
Observe
Adapted from DHHS Guidelines, February 2001
16What The New Guidelines Do Not Tell Us
- Those who started ART with a CD4 T cell count gt
350 cells/?L or a VL lt 55,000 copies/mL started
too early. - Those who started ART with a CD4 T cell count gt
350 cells/?L or a VL lt 55,000 copies/mL should
stop therapy. - Those who wish to start ART earlier should not do
so. - Patients should wait until they are symptomatic
to start ART. - The risk of developing serious complications of
therapy outweighs the risk of disease progression.
17When Should Therapy Be Started?
- No single answer is valid for every patient
- Factors to consider
- Biological factors
- CD4 T cell count
- Plasma HIV-1 RNA level
- Toxicities and risk factors for their development
- Commitment to therapy
- Social and demographic factors
- Flexibility and individualization
18Recommended ARV Therapy for Treatment of
Established HIV Infection
- Recommended One each from column A and column B
- Column A Column B
- Indinavir Zidovudine/Lamivudine
- Nelfinavir Stavudine/Lamivudine
- Ritonavir/Saquinavir Zidovudine/Didanosine
- Ritonavir/Indinavir Stavudine/Didanosine
- Lopinavir/Ritonavir
- Efavirenz
-
- Alternative Nevirapine, Delavirdine, Didanosine/
Lamivudine - Abacavir, Amprenavir,
Zidovudine/Zalcitabine - Nelfinavir/Saquinavir
19What to Start Options
- Regimen Advantages Disadvantages
- PI2 nRTI Clinical endpoint data,
Complexity, pill burden, - longest experience long-term toxicity,
effect - on future Rx
- NNRTI2 nRTI Defers PI, low pill burden Limited
long-term data, - effect on future Rx
- 2 PI2 nRTI High potency, convenient Pill
burden, long-term - dosing toxicity
- 3 nRTI Defers PI and NNRTI, Lower potency at
higher - low pill burden VL, limited long-term
- data, effect on future Rx
- PINNRTInRTI High potency Complexity,
long-term - toxicity, effect on future Rx