Title: EACS 6th Advanced HIV Course
1- Paediatric HIV
- Cases 1, 2, 3, Rebecca, Melanie, Lucy
- Carlo Giaquinto
- Department of Paediatrics,
- Padova, Italy
2When to start therapy
3PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- 5 month old, 7.5kg
- Just tested HIV-1 positive by DNA PCR
- Asymptomatic
- CD4 34 CD4 count 2913 cells/mm3, HIV RNA
207,000 copies/ml - Would you
- Start ART immediately, or
- Defer until CD4 lt25 or until clinical symptoms
(whichever is earlier)
4Treat Rebecca Now
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- HIV-associated mortality and morbidity rates are
very high in infants
5Rapid Rate of Disease Progression and Death in
HIV-Infected Infants
6Estimated probability of AIDS within 12 months by
age and CD4 percentage
Lancet 20033621605-11
7AIDS or Death by Age CD4 Count in HPPMCS
CASCADE
8Treat Rebecca Now
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- HIV-associated mortality and morbidity rates are
very high in infants - Very effective treatment available
9In the HAART era there was a 10-fold decrease in
the incidence of HIV encephalopathyPatel et al
WAIDS 2008
on HAART
Incidence rate
10Virologic Response to Lopinavir/R in 26 Children
lt 6 mo of Age (PACTG 1030)
11Recovery of immune status with HAART is dependent
on CD4 at time HAART is initiatedPatel K et al.
Clin infect dis 2008 46 507-515
40
35
Notimmunedeficient
30
25
20
Immunedeficient
Mean CD4
15
10
CD4 lt15
CD4 1524
5
CD4 gt25
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Years since HAART initiation
1,236 children enrolled in PACTG 219 not on HAART
at study initiation
12Treat Rebecca Now
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- HIV-associated mortality and morbidity rates are
very high in infants - Very effective treatment available
- Current regimens are easier to take and we are
more cognizant of toxicities
13Treat Rebecca Now
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- HIV-associated mortality and morbidity rates are
very high in infants - Very effective treatment available
- Current regimens are much easier to take and less
toxic than they used to be - Immunological response to treatment is better in
infants than in older children
14Short-term CD4 Response by Age
Walker AS et al, AIDS 2004
15Treat Rebecca Later
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- Treatment is a life-long commitment which
increases the risk of non-adherence - Adherence is fragile, varies with a wide variety
of factors including patient as well as
medication characteristics and cannot be
predicted for an individual patient
16Issues for dosing of antiretroviral drugs in
children
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- PK data by age group are sparse
- Few data on the effect of race, nutritional
status - Young children require higher doses
- - high clearance of many ARVs
- Unclear exactly when to change to adult doses
- Dose recommendations according to weight or
surface area - - somewhat arbitrary
- - where both available, may not correspond well
(eg NVP)
17- Lots of generic solutions and syrups .
18ARV Formulations for kids in resource-limited
settings
- Medecins sans Frontieres Perspective
- Dr Lisa Frigati for the MSF International AIDS
Working Group
19Treat Rebecca Later
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- Treatment is a life-long commitment which
increases the risk of non-adherence
20Treat Rebecca Later
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- Treatment is a life-long commitment which
increases the risk of non-adherence - Drugs are toxic and difficult to take
- Limited ARV choices for infants
21Relying on cutting tablets in half is not always
feasible
22Treat Rebecca Later
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- Treatment is a life-long commitment which
increases the risk of non-adherence - Drugs are toxic and difficult to take
- Virologic response in infants is not as good as
in older children, so there is danger of drug
resistance developing and limiting future
treatment options
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24Treat Rebecca Later
PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
- Treatment is a life-long commitment which
increases the risk of non-adherence - Drugs are toxic and difficult to take
- Virologic response in infants is not as good as
in older children, so there is danger of drug
resistance developing and limiting future
treatment options - If it aint broke dont fix it With high CD4
and CD4 count, Rebecca is likely to be a slow
progressor monitor carefully and treat only if
CD4 drops fast or there are indications of
symptoms
25Immunologic Response to ART by Age, Lusaka Zambia
Stringer J et al
Stringer J et al, in press
26Historically weve been back and forth, early and
late, high and low
- 1991 - Treat sickest individuals
- 1997 - Hit early, Hit hard
- Eradicate infection
- 2000 - Hit late, Hit hard
- Cant eradicate, drugs toxic, adherence difficult
- Treat symptomatic, immunologically compromised,
viremic - 2007 Hit earlier, Hit hard
- Regional differences in guidelines approaches
- Guidelines not based on randomized evidence but
expert opinion and cohort data
27Considerations to Determine When to Start
- What do we know about the disease?
- Rate of progression in the population
- Predictors of progression
- What are the goals for treatment?
- Prevent disease progression
- PREVENT MORTALITY
- Prevent morbidity how much morbidity is
acceptable? - Minimize treatment related toxicity
- Maximize quality of life disease manifestations
toxicity adherence - Prevent development of ART resistance
- Prolong duration and optimize options for long
term treatment
28Early Initiation of Antiretroviral Therapy in
HIV-Infected Children Dramatically Decreases Risk
of Death Study design(Violari et al IAS 2007,
Abs WESS103).
29CHER 76 reduction in the risk of death with
immediate (arms 2 3) compared to deferred (arm
1) HAARTCROI 2008 Abs 76, Abs 600
1
Deferred
p 0.0002
Immediate
0.80
0.60
Failure probability
0.40
16
0.20
4
0
0
3
6
9
12
Time to death (months)
Patients at risk Arm 1 Arm 2 Arm 3
125 252
104 213
72 145
44 99
22 52
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31European Infant Collaboration
32WHO 2008 Revised Guidelines When to Start
Antiretroviral Therapy in HIV-Infected Children
If lack ability for viral test, use WHO
presumptive diagnosis of severe HIV (thrush,
severe pneumonia or sepsis) in infants with HIV
antibody test and with clinical symptoms of
severe HIV need to confirm infection status as
soon as possible.
33PaediatricsCase 1 Rebecca
Treat earlier
But we need to have a long term strategy !!!
34PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- 12 month old male from Central Asia who developed
respiratory distress requiring oxygen 4 hours
prior to landing in April 2007 - Initial PE significant for respiratory distress
with RR 46, oxygen sat of 88 on room air weight
8.3 kg (lt5ile), ht 27.5 cm (lt5ile), icteric
sclera, decreased BS on right, and
hepatosplenomegaly
Courtesy of Dr Neu
35PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- Hospital Course
- Immediately intubated
- CXR revealed pneumonia with large right sided
pleural effusion - Chest CT with heterogeneous high density
collections in the right lung - Started on vancomycin, piperacillin/tazobactam
and tobramycin - Blood, pleural fluid and sputum grow ESBL
Klebsiella pneumoniae
36Chest CT
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
37Past Medical History
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- Born full term, NSVD, no complications
- Breast fed x 6 months during that time, normal
growth and development - Immunizations
- DTAP x 3
- Polio x 4
- Hep B x 3
- Hib x 1
38Past Medical History cont.
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- At 6 months of age developed recurrent vomiting,
diarrhea, fever and severe anemia - Treatments - IV fluids, IM injections,
anti-diarrheals, multiple transfusions (gt10) of
blood, plasma, and platelets from family members
and doctors - During the next 6 months, diagnosed with acute
gastroenteritis, CMV, hepatitis A, anemia and
thrombocytopenia
39ID Consulted for Chronic Infection!
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- What labs do you request?
- CBC and differential
- NBT test
- Total immunoglobulins with subclasses
- HIV ELISA
- HIV DNA/RNA PCR
40Laboratory Findings
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- Initial WBC 11.8K (83 PMN,8 lymph), platelets
19 x 109/L - Hgb 6 gms/dL, Hct 19
- AST/ALT 83/30 U/l Total bili 5.4 mg/dL (DB 2.7)
- PT/PTT 15.1/57.5 sec, Fibrinogen 247 mg/dL,
DDimer 5.65 µg/ml, ferritin 1904 - IgA 12, IgG 603, IgM 22 (low), IgE 153 mg/dL
41Cultures and Serologies
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- HAV , HCV negative, HBV positive (Ag negative)
- CMV PCR lt600 copies/ml
- ( CMV IgM negative, IgG )
- HIV ELISA negative
- Blood ()Klebsiella pneumoniae (sensitive to
imi, mero, amikacin, and cipro/levo resistant to
gent) - Sputum ()Parainfluenza 3 by DFA
- Sputum negative AFB, TST negative, culture
negative for TB, negative for Pneumocystis
42Immunology Work Up
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- CD4 14, CD4 96 cells/µL
- Started on treatment doses of Trimethoprim/sulfame
thoxasole - HIV-1 RNA PCR gt750,000 copies/ml
- Mother and father
- HIV ELISA negative
- HIV RNA PCR negative
43Efficacy of HIV TransmissionInfect Cont Hosp
Epidemiol 2006 27 944-52
Low risk procedure 0.5-3 risk High risk
procedure 10-20 risk
44Clinical Course
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- Rapid respiratory failure - high O2, treated with
steroids right lung pneumatocoeles developed and
eventually placed on oscillator - Endoscopy to evaluate anemia revealed chronic
gastritis and erosions - CT of abdomen - HSM, small ascites, calcification
in right adrenal gland
45Would You Start ARVs?
PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- I would start antiretroviral therapy
- immediately.
- once the patient reaches his viral set point.
- once the patient can take oral medications.
- after I treat the patients pneumonia and
pancytopenia first.
46PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- Clinical Course
- Started on Lopinavir/ritonavir, Zerit, and Epivir
via G tube - Sporadic treatment due to pancytopenia and
pancreatitis - CD4 ?ed 20 and 156, VL still gt750,000
- Continued respiratory distress
- 2 weeks later developed CMV early Ag in sputum
culture - CMV PCR increased to 3990
- 1 month into illness developed decreased movement
of lower extremities, hypotonia, clonus
47PaediatricsCase 2 Abel
- Clinical course
- LP WBC 0/mm3, protein 19 mg/dl, glucose 88 mg/dl
- CMV PCR gt100,000 copies/ml
- CT head - atrophy but no lesions
- Started ganciclovir
- Deceased 2 weeks later- no autopsy granted by
family
48CMV and HIV Disease Progression in Infants
49PaediatricsCase 3 Lucy
- History of present illness
- 5 mo born in SE Asia, abandoned at the National
Childrens Hospital at 1 month of age - While at hospital noted to have cough, fever, and
hemoptysis - CXR - RUL infiltrate
- PCR of gastric aspirates for TB
- Transferred to TB hospital
50PaediatricsCase 3 Lucy
- What would you do for the baby?
- I would send the following tests
- HIV DNA PCR and/ or HIV ELISA/WB
- TB culture- gastric aspirates or bronchoscopy?
- Complete blood count and CD4 if available
- Screen for Cystic fibrosis with a sweat test
51PaediatricsCase 3 Lucy
- Hospital Course
- After 3 days of therapy on rifampin, INH and
pyrazinamide, child developed liver test
abnormalities gt1000, medications stopped - 3 months later restarted INH and ethambutol.
- 1 month later continued to have hemoptysis, poor
weight gain (3.4 kg ltlt3 ile), and progressive
neurodevelopment delayed. - CD4 15
52PaediatricsCase 3 Lucy
- What would you do?
- TB management
- I would use rifampin, INH, pyrazinamide, and
ethambutol as the initial regimen. - I would modify my initial regimen given the age
and poor condition of the baby. - I would avoid using rifampin due to LFT
abnormalities. - I use intensive treatment for 2 months and then
change to maintenance therapy.
53PaediatricsCase 3 Lucy
- Other considerations?
- What else are you worried about in the baby?
- CNS disease?
- HIV?
- Wasting syndrome?
- Hepatitis?
54TB and HIV cont.
55TB and HIV
TB/HIV Clinical Manual. WHO. 2004. 2nd Edition