Title: Transplant, HIV and HCV Whats it Going to Be
1Transplant, HIV and HCVWhats it Going to Be?
- Katherine Jelinek, M.D., Fellow
- University of Illinois at Chicago
- Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology
2HCV is Difficult to Manage After Liver
Transplantation
- Recurrence of HCV is universal
- Liver disease progresses more rapidly
- 10-30 develop cirrhosis in 5-7 years
- Anti-viral therapy
- Average response rate to IFN RBV is 20
- Dropout rates of 20-40 in carefully selected
patients - Firpi et al. Liver Transplantation 2002 8(11)
1000-1006. - Norris et al. Liver Transplantation 2004 10
(10) 1271-1278.
3Influence of HIV on HCV Infection
- 300,000 people with HIV/HCV or HBV in the US
- HCV in the HIV population is approximately 23-33
and up to 80 in HIV hemophiliacs - Natural history of HCV is accelerated in pts with
HIV - More rapid progression to cirrhosis
- HCC at a younger age and shorter duration of HCV
infection - Increase in liver disease-related mortality
- HCV RNA levels are higher in patients with
co-infection - Karon et al. J Hepatology 1997 27 18-21
- Ragni et et al. J Infect Dis 2001 183
1112-1115 - Benhamou et al. Hepatology 1999 30 1054-1058
- Darby et al. Lancet 1997 350 1425-31.
- Garcia et al. American J Gastroenterology 2001
96 179-183.
4OLT in Patients with HIV Pre-HAART
- 38 liver transplants
- Poorly defined baseline characteristics (CD4
counts, HIV RNA levels, OIs) - 7-yr survival 36 compared to 70 HIV negative
OLT during same period - Rapidly progressive liver disease complicated HCV
positive cases50 of hemophiliacs with HIV/HCV
died - Bouscarat et al. Clinical Infectious Dis 1994
19 854-859 - Gordon et al. Gut 1998 42 744-749.
5OLT in Patients with HIVHAART Era
- Over 50 liver transplants done
- Early reports of HIV-HCV co-infection report more
rapid progression of HCV infection - Problems with data set HIV infection found at
time of transplant for early cases - Different transplant centers report different
survival rates - Prachalias, et al. Transplantation 2001 72
1684-1688.
6Comparison of Pittsburgh Group to Kings College
Group
- Kings College Grp transplanted gt1000 pts between
1995-2003, with 14 having HIV, and 7 having
HIV/HCV co-infection. - Poor outcomes of 7 pts, 57 alive at 12 months,
but gt90 dead by 25 months - 5 died due to recurrence of hep C and rejection
- Some developed cholestatic form of Hep C
recurrence that lead to graft failure - Prachalias et al. Transplantation 2001 72 (10),
1684-88. - Norris et al. Liver Transplantation Oct 2004 10
(10), 1271-78.
7OLT in other CentersHIV and HCV
- Had pts from 5 different centers Univ.
Pittsburgh, Univ. Miami, USCF and Kings College,
London between 1997-2001 - Excluded if had OI, not affected if had previous
OI or CD4 count - Of 24, only 2 did not receive preoperative
antiretroviral therapy - 87 white (5 African American), 83 male, 62
had Hep C (15 subjects) - MELD score avg 15 (range 7-33)
- Platelets 73 (28-185)
- TB 3.2 (.7-27)
- INR 1.5 (.6-3.6)
- CD4 188 (76-973)
- HIV RNA PCR lt400 (lt400-179,000)
- Ragni et al. Survival of HIV-Infected Liver
Transplant Recipients. Journal of Infectious
Disease 2003 188 (15 Nov) 1412-1420.
8Results on Survival
- Median survival 18 months1 died within 1mo
- Results 6 died (25)83 of those from
ESLD--60 due to drug hepatotoxicity, 60 had
recurrent hep C infection, 40 with rejection - Survival levels differ between study centers,
better outcomes from University of Pittsburgh and
worse outcomes from Kings College in the UK
9HIV/HCV OLT compared to HCV OLT in UNOS data
--Comparable survival until 18 months when
survival dropped to 56 in HIV/HCV group Ragni et
al. Journal Infectious Disease 2003 188
1412-20.
10Which HIV transplant pts did not survive (6/18)?
- 100 non-survivors had Hep C (p.03)
- 67 of non-survivors had post-OLT HAART
intolerance (p.044) - 60 had lower post-OLT CD4 count lt 200 (p.003)
- 33 of non-survivors had higher HIV RNA copies
gt400 (p.016) - Ragni et al. Journal Infectious Disease 188
1412-20.
11Second Look at HIV and OLT University of
Pittsburgh Group
- Of 50 pts transplanted, HCV accounted for 68 of
causes of liver disease - Reports 80 alivewith varying periods of
follow-up. - Problems with paper
- 80 survival, but this group had 90 recurrence
of HCV - Largest Series from University of Pittsburgh with
29 HIV/ESLD pts. since 1997, 89 with HCV, avg
MELD 21, 80 white males - 55 were taking HAART at time of transplant
- HCV VL not available, therefore
Child-Turcotte-Pugh score was not available to
assess survival - Could not compare this group of highly selected
pts to other groups - Fung et al. Liver Transplantation, Vol 10, No
10, Supp 2 (Oct) 2004 S39-S53. - Norris et al. Liver Transplantation 10 (10),
1271-1278
12Problems with HAART and Immunosuppression in HIV
OLT pts
- Problems with dosing medsadded hepatotoxicity of
NRTI and altered pharmacokinetics of protease
inhibitor metabolism - Multiple different meds and constant adjustments
to anti-retroviral and immunosuppressants (from
drug interactions) make compliance a huge factor - Mitochondrial toxicity reported with
anti-retrovirals with hepatic steatosis - Problems show the complexity of managing HAART
for HIV in HCV-co-infected patients - Antoniades et al. Liver Transplantation 2004
Vol 10 (5) 699-702.
13Conclusions
- Multiple examples of drug-induced hepatotoxicity
from HAART - Increased risk of hepatic dysfunction due to HCV
recurrence - NO data for efficacy or tolerability of IFN in
these patients - Papers only mention that pts are treated, not how
their response is - Need studies to define patient selection for this
- Based on natural history of disease
- Based on use of anti-retroviral therapy
14Conclusions, cont.
- Potential to exposing patients to increased
morbidity and mortality - Increased organ usage
- Increased exposure to HIV and HCV (Surgeons, OR
nurses, ICU nurses, respiratory therapists,
hepatologists) - Should base future decisions on clinical
multi-center trials on variety of patients.
15Thank you.