Title: Crampin et al. AIDS. 2002 16: 1547
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2Crampin et al. AIDS. 2002 16 1547
3Life expectancy at age 20
Hogg. CROI. 2007 Poster 972
4Life Expectancy ART-C-C
5Increasing Percentage of Older (55 yrs or over)
Diagnosed, HIV-infected Individuals in the UK
Overall in the UK, a third of all adults (15)
are 55 yrs or over
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7Age at estimated HIV seroconversion in CASCADE
8Complex
AGE
HAART
HIV
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11Ageing Inevitable
- 2nd law of thermodynamics
- Darwinian evolution
12Molecular Mechanics of AGEING
- Senescence (Telomere shortening)
- Apoptosis
- Reactive Intermediates mitochondrial dysfunction
13Old Age and HIVImmune Characteristics
- Inverted CD4/CD8
- CD4 lymphopaenia
- ? thymic output
- ? naïve cells
- ? IL2 (? I ?)
- ? mitogen responses
- Shorter telomeres CD8
- Late differentiated CD4 CD8 accumulate
- (CD28- CD27- CCR7-)
Appay et al. Trends in Imunology. 2002
14Bender et al. AIDS. 2002
15Predictors of the Change in CD4 Cell Count
During First 8 Month in the IL-2 arm of ESPRIT
CD4 nadir /100 cell ? plt0.0001 CD4 count
prior to BL /100 cells ? plt0.0001 Tot. IL-2
dose in 1st cycle /15 MIU ?
plt0.0001 HIV-RNA (lt500 cps/ml) p0.003
White (ref.) p0.0005 Black
Asian Other Age /5 years older
p0.001 Time on ART
/year longer plt0.0001
CDC category C (Yes) p0.016
BMI /5 unit ? p0.012
-100
-80
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Difference in CD4 count increase (cells /µl)
ESPRIT study group Fox et al. HIV Medicine. 2007
16Response to HAART and AGE
- CD4 count
- Adherence (viral load)
- Non-AIDS and AIDS mortality
17Role of Age on the Improvement in CD4 Cell Count
Number When Initiating cART
80
Age quartiles
lt37
70
gt37
60
50
with CD4 increase of ?200.106/L
40
30
20
10
P.0026, log-rank test
0
0
6
12
18
24
30
36
Months since starting HAART
Curves of time to increase in CD4 cell count of
?200 x 106 cels/L after start of HAART in
subjects in 2 age quartiles
Viard et al. J Infect Dis 2001 183 1290-4
18Adherence Some things do get better with Age
Hinkin. AIDS. 2004
19HIV-1 RNA lt500 at 6 months by Age
Grabar. AIDS. 2004
20Age survival and Response to Treatment
Mayer et al. CID. 2005 41
21Interactions of Chronic Disease, HIV and Age
- Social
- Chronic renal failure ?
- Liver disease ?
- Bone mineral density ?
Geriatric Giants
- Neoplasia
- Atheroma
- Dementia
22Risk factors for chronic renal failure
EuroSIDA Mocroft et al. AIDS. 2007
23AGE
GENES
Lipids (TG HDL)
ATHEROMA
Infection
SMOKING
ENDOTHELIUM
24Relative Rate of MI According to PI Exposure
Adjusted for NNRTI
Adjusted RR per year of PI 1.16 1.10-1.23
? Adjusted for sex, age, cohort, calendar year,
prior CVD, family history of CVD, smoking,
body-mass index, NNRTI exposure
DAD study Friis-Møller et al. NEJM
25Other Predictors Not Influenced by cART - of
MI in DAD
Better
Worse
Age per 5 years older Male gender Previous
CVD Smoking Family history
5
0.5
10
1
0.1
Relative rate of myocardial infarction (95
CI) Multivariable Poisson model Adjusted for BMI,
HIV risk, cohort, calendar year and race
26Relative Rates of Myocardial Infarction According
to Calendar Year Before and After Adjusting for
Changes in Risk Factors
Sabin et al. CROI. 2005
27Risk of CVD with ART Interruptions
SMART Study
20
15
10
with a Major CVD Event
DC
5
VS
0
0.5
1.5
2.5
3.5
0
1
2
3
4
Years from Randomization
No. at Risk
2752
1306
713
379
10
DC
2720
1292
696
377
10
VS
Phillips et al. 14th CROI. Los Angeles. CA.
February 25-28. 2007 Abst. 41.
28Risk of CVD with ART Interruptions
SMART Study
ART at Baseline
ART at Baseline
10
30
Off
On
Off
On
20
5
10
Change in HDL Cholesterol (mg/dL)
0
Change in Total Cholesterol (mg/dL)
0
VS
VS
VS
DC
-10
-5
DC
VS
-20
DC
DC
-10
-30
plt 0.0001
plt 0.0001
plt 0.0001
plt 0.0001
Phillips et al. 14th CROI. Los Angeles. CA.
February 25-28. 2007 Abst. 41.
29Bozetti et al. NEJM. 2004
30Aetiology of Atheroma
31Error bars represent 95 confidence intervals
(plt0.001)
Other studies have found a 2 fold increase
(95CI 1.62-2.52) JCO 03
32DAD HIV and Fatal Malignancies
- Types and risk factors for AIDS-defining
malignancies (ADM) and non-ADM studied in DAD1 - 23,447 HIV patients 104,691 person-years of F/U
- Fatal non-ADM have become more common than ADM
- Incidence of both non-ADM and ADM increases with
lower CD4 cell count but is not affected by HIV
RNA - Current smokers had a 2.92-fold higher risk of
fatal non-ADM than those who never smoked (risk
for ex-smokers 2.02-fold higher) - Other cohorts have reported similar increases in
non-ADM2 - HIV Atlanta VA Cohort study 3051 patients
followed since 1982 - Annual incidence of prostate cancer has risen
from 1/1000 before 2003 to 4.6/1000 since 2003
(plt0.00006)
Fatal malignancies
Incidence of fatal ADM and non-ADM by latest CD4
count
25
20
ADM
Non-ADM
15
Event rate /1000 PFYU
10
5
0
lt50
50-99
100-199
200-349
350-499
500
Latest CD4 count (cells/mm3)
1. DArminio Monforte A, et al. 14th CROI, Los
Angeles 2007, 84 2. Rimland D, et al. ibid, 874
33Tumours and HIV
Loss of immune surveillance
Promotion of cancer intracellularly
Direct
Oncogenic viruses
34HIV and the 6 Steps to Cancer
- Self sufficiency in growth signals
- Insensitivity to antigrowth signals -
retinoblastoma protein - Evasion of apoptosis
- Limitless replication potential (avoidance of
senescence) (telomerase function) - Sustained angiogenesis (VEGF)
- Tissue invasion and metastasis (ICAM)
Hanahan et al. Cell. 100 257-70
35EBV, HHV-8, HBV/HCV and Helicobacter pylori
Related Cancers
Lancet. 2007
36HPV Related, or Possibly Related Cancers
Lancet. 2007
37Common Epithelial Cancers
Lancet. 2007
38Other Cancers Occurring at Increased Rates
Lancet. 2007
39HIV Ageing Dementia
- HAD may be changing
- Gliosis may continue despite HAART(proviral DNA
correlates with HAD) - HAART may contribute to dementia
- HIV may predispose to Alzheimers
40ADC in the HAART Era
- More cortical presentation
- PET scan temporal lobe gt Basal Ganglia
- CSF changes (VL ß2 micro globulin) lt sensitive
41Alzheimers in HIV
- ß amyloid deposition
- Extra amyloid plaques
- ?CSF ß amyloid
- Neprolysin inhibited by TAT
- ? apolipoprotein E4
42Age
- Death be not proud though some have called thee
mighty and dreadful for thou art not so.
John Donne (1631)
43Maya Gazzard
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45Non AIDS HIV Related Diseases
- Liver Disease
- Renal Disease
- Cardiovascular Disease
46Bozetti et al. New Engl. J. Med. 2003 702
207-76 admissions
47Late cells
- CD28 CD27 CD1 low high
- CCR7 CD4 Ra /-
- HIV specific cells CD27 28-
- EBV cells early C28 CCR7
- CMV cells late C28 ve CCR7-
- IRP phenotype
48Dementia
Toxic Products
N2O Superoxides Platelet activation
Activated Microglia
Cylokines
? E4 ? Amyloid
49Ageing
- Long term investment
- In soma reduces
- Darwinian fitness
- (need 2 hearts)
- Obeys the 2nd law of thermodynamics
50Immune Risk Phenotype
- CD4 CD8 lt 1
- ?CD8 CD28 cells
- (? CMVVE ?proinflammatory cytokines)
Akbar et al. Current opinion in immunology.
2005 450
51Non-AIDS Defying Cancers
(482 ex 14,210 adultsHAART 3,455 AIDS
defying) ?Risk (RH 2.9) ?Risk (RH 0.32)
Hessol et al. Am. J of Epidemiology. 2007 165
1143
52Why the Immunological Changes?
- Chronic activation
- Thymic function
53The Mechanism of AGEING
- The longer the process to maturity the longer the
time to ageing. - Senescence telomere shortening
- Telomerase
54Guesses
- Its all TAT
- Its all adhesion markers
- Its all telomerase
- What about free radicals?
55Tumours - Classic
- Kaposis Sarcoma
- Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Cervical Cancer
56Tumours - Many Others
- Seminoma
- Anal carcinoma
- Head Neck Tumours
- Lung Cancer
Correct for smoking Correct for age
57Tumour Mechanisms
Oncogenic viruses
Interference with cell machinery
Common acquisition
Synergy with HIV
Immune suppression (NADIR CD4)
58HIV Ageing
Complexity
Biological Reductionism
HAART or HIV
59Atheroma
HIV
HAART
Smart
D.A.D.
60Age Sex
- It continues!
- No need for contraception
- Fewer negotiating skills
- Lack of targeted education
61Neoplasia HIV Ageing
Common acquisition
Molecular machinery
Immune surveillance
NKactivity
Oncogenic viruses
Longer to acquire
AGE worse
Run down
62Aetiology of Neoplasia
Self-sufficiency in growth signals
Insensitivity to anti-growth signals
Evading apoptosis
Sustained angiogenesis
Tissue invasion metastasis
Limitless replicative potential
63Contribution of Ageing on the Outcome of AIDS
Prior to the Introduction of cART
Scand J Infect Dis 1997 29337-343
64Odds Ratio (OR) of Contracting Selected AIDS-
Defining Events at the Time of AIDS Diagnosis
Scand J Infect Dis 1997 29337-343
65AIDS RatesEuroSIDA 1994 -2003
EuroSIDA, Lancet, 2003
66Factors Associated With HIV and Negatively
Influenced by Age
- Related to cART
- Impaired immunological response to cART and IL-2
- Related to general health condition
- Memory loss (ADC and other CNS diseases)
- Increased risk of diseases associated with the
normal aging process but accelerated in presence
of immunodeficiency - Non-AIDS defining malignancies
- CVD
- Obesity and metabolic syndrome
67The Conondrum of Using cART
- Allow persons to get older
- Demasking chronic disease processes associated
with HIV not perceived as an issue prior to the
introduction of cART (eg. HBV, HCV) - Allow the normal aging process to manifest itself
clinically - Exacerbate adverse effects of cART that interacts
with the normal aging process
Focus of medical management has to expand and
take these issues into account !!!!
68Effect of Absolute vs. Delta-Viral Load from
Setpoint on Current CD4-Slope in 628 Patients
On-Treatment With Stable Viral Load in PLATO
Patients 88 177 308
394
284 376 188 159
Observations 177 410 705 1304
687 1005 441 427
150
100
50
Mean(95CI) CD4-slope
cells/mLyr
0
-50
3
4
lt2.5
gt4.5
1
2
lt0.5
gt2.5
VL
delta-VL from setpoint
log10copies/mL
log10copies/mL
PLATO study group, Ledergerber et al. Lancet 2004
69CD4 Slope in Triple Class Failures on Stable ART
PLATO study group, Ledergerber et al, Lancet, 2004
70Incidence of MI According to Age in DAD
50
40
30
Incidence / 1000 PY/ 95 CI
20
10
0
Age group
25-30
30-35
35-40
40-45
60-65
45-50
50-55
55-60
65-70
gt70
2 11 36 48
55 48 31 15 16 14
Events
3834 10801 20075 16900 9741
6687 3899 2093 989 641
PYFU
71Effect of cART (Per Year of Exposure) on Risk of
MI by Age and Gender in DAD
Adjusted for risk factors
P-val
RR
0.0006
1.14 (1.06-1.24)
Men
0.01
1.38 (1.07-1.76)
Women
0.003
1.18 (1.06-1.32)
Younger
0.006
1.15 (1.04-1.27)
Older
Age lt45 years in men / lt55 years in
women Formal tests of interaction gender
(p0.51), age (p0.41)
DAD study Friis-Møller et al, NEJM
72Predictors of the CD4 cell count response during
the first 8 months of follow up in the IL-2 arm
of ESPRIT
K Ruxrungtham, ZV Fox, F Antunes, JD Bebchuk, RT
Davey, B Gazzard, NG Klimas, AM Labriola, MH
Losso, JD Neaton, S Staszewski, L Weiss, AN
Phillips and JD Lundgren on behalf of the ESPRIT
study group
73Prevalence of Hepatitis C (1685/4957 patients
33.9)
North 346 24,5
East 412 47,7
Central 280 22,9
South 623 44,9
Rockstroh J et al. EACS 2003 F12/4
74Natural Course of Hepatitis C
- 60-85 of HCV-infected persons develop chronic
infection - Estimates of the proportion of chronically
infected persons who develop cirrhosis 20 years
after initial HCV infection vary widely - 2-4 in young children and young women
- 20-30 in middle-aged transfused subjects
75Factors associated with fatalnon-AIDS-related
malignancies
DAD study DArminio Monforte et al. 14th CROI,
2007
76Summary
- cART has dramatically improved prognosis
- Hence, the HIV population will age
- Older age may adverse affect the response to cART
and exacerbate the absolute risk of adverse
events of cART linked to the aging process (like
CVD) - Older persons are at increased risk of mental
impairment and hence at excess risk of
non-adherence to cART - As immunodeficiency may accelerate the
progression of several pathologies associated
with the aging process (eg. liver disease
associated with chronic infection with HBV/HCV,
non-AIDS defining malignacies (e.g. bronchial
carcinoma), it is important to avoid this
situation.
77Improved survival expectations by age at HIV
seroconversion
1.00
pre-1997
Estimated proportion alive at 10 years following
SC
0.75
16-24 64
Proportion alive
0.50
25-34 56
35-44 42
0.25
45 28
0
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
16-24 94
1.00
1999-2001
25-34 95
35-44 91
0.75
45 87
Proportion alive
0.50
0.25
0
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Years from seroconversion
78Liver related death and HIV(DAD Study)
- Cohort study of gt23,000 patients in Europe,
Australia, and the USA - 1,248 (5.3) deaths 20002004(1.6/100
person-years) - Of these, 82 on ART
- Leading causes of death
- AIDS (30)
- Liver disease (14)
- Heart disease (9)
- Malignancy (8)
RR of death according to immune function and
specific cause
100
10
RR
1.0
- Predictors of liver-related death
- Age (RR 1.3 per 5 years older)
- IDU (RR 2 vs MSM)
- CD4 (RR 1.23 per halving of C4)
- Anti-HCV (RR 6.7)
- HBsAg (RR 3.7)
gt500
lt50
5099
100199
200349
350499
CD4 (cells/mm3)
0.1
Weber R, et al. 12th CROI, Boston 2005, 595.
79? Adiponectin Inhibition
Vasorelaxation ?
? Procoagulant activity
LDLR family ?
EPITHELIAL DYSFUNCTION
? eNos/No
ICAM I ?
? Reactive oxygen species
Reuse cholesterol transport ?
? Mitochondrial dysfunction
? PPAR?
Wang et al. JAIDS 2007
80- Much Literature
- Little Data
81Cohort Study - Bias
- Ascertainment Bias
- Induced Bias
- Channelling Bias
82Age and Other Factors Predicting Types of Death
in HIV Infected Persons
DAD study Weber et al, Arch Intern Med
83- Getting less with years
- Most of risk explained by lipid abnormality
84Questions
- Will HIV accelerate the process of ageing?
- Will HIV accelerate the degenerative diseases of
ageing? - Will ART reverse or accelerate these processes?
85Geriatric Giants
- Atheroma
- Neoplasia
- Dementia