Title: HIV and Hepatitis C Coinfection
1HIV and Hepatitis C Co-infection
- Amy Kindrick, M.D., M.P.H.
- San Francisco AIDS Education and Training Center
- National HIV/AIDS Clinicians Consultation Center
February 21, 2003
2The Hepatitis C Virus
3Is There Only One Kind of Hepatitis?
4HCV Has Broad Global Prevalence
5HCV Infection Epidemiology
- 50 million infected worldwide
- 5 million in Europe
- 4 million in USA
- Contributes to 12,000 deaths/yr
6Hepatitis C Virus Infection
- U.S. Overall antibody prevalence 1.8
- 64 positive for HCV RNA
- Estimated 2.7 million persons chronically
infected - Parenteral transmission route
- Current risk of transfusion lt 1 in 1,000,000
7How Is HCV Transmitted?
- Infected blood
- Occupational percutaneous or mucosal exposure
- Est. 1.8 transmission rate after needle stick
- Needle sharing
- Transfusion (very rare since mid 1990s)
- Infected body fluids
- Amniotic fluid
- Perinatal transmission rate est. 3 - 5
- ? Genital secretions
- Inefficient sexual transmission
8HCV Diagnosis
- Enzyme immunoassays (EIA)
- Initial screening test for patients with liver
disease - False positives in low risk patients
- Occasional false negatives, esp. With HIV
- Recombinant immunoblot assays (RIBA)
- Confirmatory test if EIA positive in low risk pt
- HCV RNA by PCR or bDNA
- Confirmatory if RIBA is indeterminant
9Who Should Be Tested?
- Drug users
- Recipients of blood products or organ transplant
before 1992 - HIV-infected individuals
- Children born to HCV-infected mothers
- Persons with occupational exposures
- Long-term partners of infected individuals
10Consider Testing For
- Persons with tattoos or body piercing
- Persons with multiple sexual partners
11Acute Hepatitis C Virus Infection
- Incubation period 2-26 weeks
- Acute infection may be asymptomatic
- Relatively long window period
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13Acute Hepatitis C
14Hepatitis C Virus Infection Natural History
- Clinical course is variable
- Chronic infection in 70 85
- Cirrhosis in 10 20 of chronically infected
- Develops in 15 25 years
- Hepatocellular carcinoma
- 1 5 after 20 years
- 1 4 per year once cirrhosis is established
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17Vaccinate, Vaccinate, Vaccinate
18Stigmata of Chronic Liver Disease
19Esophageal Varices
20Chronic HCV Infection With Cirrhosis
21Hepatocellular Carcinoma
22Hepatocellular Carcinoma
23Extrahepatic Manifestations of HCV
- Arthritis
- Glomerulonephritis
- Mixed cryoglobulinemia
24Mixed Cryoglobulinemia
25HCV/HIV Co-infectionGeneral Issues
- 150,000 300,000 prevalent cases in U.S.
- Average prevalence 35
- Varies geographically and by HIV risk behavior
- 80 90 in HIV IDUs
- gt 50 in incarcerated persons with HIV
- lt 10 in MSM
- Major transmission route is IDU
- Enhanced HCV vertical transmission
- 15-35 in co-infected vs 3-5 in HCV
mono-infected - ? Enhanced sexual HCV transmission
26Diagnosis of HCV in HIV-infected Patients
- Co-infection may reduce sensitivity of HCV
antibody tests (EIA or RIBA) - 9 19 Ab negative, RNA positive
- Measure HCV RNA if history or clinical symptoms
are suggestive
George, et al. JAIDS 31154, 2002
27Impact of HIV on HCV
- HIV infection worsens HCV-related liver disease
- 2.9 fold increase in risk of progressive liver
disease - ALT levels higher
- Fibrosis more severe
- Time to fibrosis shorter
- Cirrhosis, liver failure, and HCC more common
- Liver-related death rates higher
- Vertical HCV transmission enhanced
- Impaired Th1 function in HIV infection may affect
immune response to HCV
Graham, et al. CID 33562, 2001
28Impact of HCV on HIV
- Conflicting clinical results
- More rapid progression to AIDS or death for HCV
genotype 1 - Increasing HIV RNA and decreasing CD4 more likely
in co-infected pts - May interfere with optimal HAART
29Treating Hepatitis C
30HCV Treatment Rationale
- Viral eradication
- Better HCV outcomes
- Decrease fibrosis
- Decrease rate of fatal hepatocellular carcinomas
- Increase T-cell responsiveness to HCV antigens
- Better HIV outcomes
- Reduce hepatic toxicity of ARVs
31HCV Treatment Options
- Interferon monotherapy
- Sustained response rates similar to HCV-infected
alone - Weak correlation with CD4 counts
- Interferon-ribavirin combination therapy
- Superior to monotherapy
- Co-infection trials ongoing
- Preliminary findings encouraging
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33Combination Therapy Vs. Monotherapy
- Randomized placebo controlled trial of
- 110 co-infected pts
- Standard IFN plus ribavirin or placebo
- Combo superior to mono at 12 weeks
- HCV RNA undetectable in 23 vs 5 (P0.016)
- Discontinuation for toxicity similar (23 vs 18)
Kostman, et al. 1st IAS Conf., Buenos Aires 2001
34PEG vs Standard IFN RIBAVIC Trial
- Randomized open-label trial
- 416 co-infected pts
- CD4 gt 200
- Stable HIV RNA (on or off HAART)
- PegIFN/RBV vs standard IFN/RBV for 48 weeks
- Peg/RBV superior to standard/RBV
- 48 vs 27 response rates (P0.009)
- Adverse event profiles similar
- 28 vs 20
AIDS 2002 Barcelona, LbOr 16
35Interferon-Ribavirin Toxicity
- Flu-like symptoms
- Depression
- Leukopenia
- Anemia
- ? Reduced effectiveness of ARV therapy with
ribavirin - May inhibit intracellular AZT and d4T
phosphorylation - Not substantiated with clinical data
36Contraindications For HCV Treatment
- Absolute
- Hypersensitivity to IFN or RBV
- Autoimmune disease
- Decompensated liver disease
- Pregnancy
- Hemoglobinopathies
- Active OI
- Relative
- Severe psychiatric disorder
- Coronary artery disease
- Pancreatitis
- Uncontrolled diabetes
- Seizure disorder
Expert Perspectives III Strategies for the
Management of HIV/HCV Coinfection, 2002.
37What About OTC Medications?
38Complementary Therapies
- For liver disease
- Milk thistle (silymarin)
- Licorice root (glycyrrhizin)
- Toxicity possible with high doses
- gt100 mg glycyrrhizin/day OR
- gt3 grams licorice root/day for gt 6 weeks
- Ginseng
- For treatment-related symptoms
- Ginger
39HCV Future Treatment Options
- HCV-specific viral enzyme inhibitors
- Helicase
- Protease
- RNA polymerase
- Internal ribosomal entry site inhibitors
- Antisense nucleotides
- Vaccination
40Clinical Case
- 34 y/o HIV-infected man
- HIV in 1991
- H/O IDU and alcohol use
- Persistent transaminitis (ALT 160-280)
- Negative HBV and HCV serologies
41Clinical Case HIV Therapy
- Initial CD4 50, HIV RNA 100,000
- 6/98 d4T, 3TC, ADF (renal toxicity)
- 8/98 ABC, 3TC, NLF, EFV
- 11/98 NLF stopped for rash
- 12/98 transaminitis
- 3/99 all ARVs stopped (despite VLgt1 mil)
- 6/99 d4T, 3TC, ABC, NLF (jaundice)
42HCV Clinical Evaluation
- HCV antibody
- HCV viral load
- HCV genotype
- Liver function tests
- Liver biopsy
- Gold standard for assessing disease status
- ALT and AST do not predict liver histology
- HCV RNA does not predict liver histology or
outcomes
43Clinical Case Diagnosis
- Liver biopsy
- Fibrous expansion of portal areas, portal
inflammation, piecemeal necrosis, activity in
gt2/3 of lobules
44Clinical Case Management Challenge
- Hold ARVs until LFTs normalize, then restart with
different agents - Stop ARVs and treat HCV
- Continue ARVs and treat HCV
45Co-Infection Summary
- Natural course of chronic HCV accelerated by
concurrent HIV infection - Counsel alcohol and hepatotoxin avoidance
- Vaccinate!!
- Consider treatment for coinfected patients with
stable HIV and good clinical, functional status - New treatment options for chronic HCV should be
urgently explored
46Consultation Services for Clinicians Caring for
Patients with HIV/AIDS
- Local expert clinicians
- Regional and local AIDS Education and Training
Centers - National HIV Telephone Consultation Service
(Warmline) - (800) 933-3413
- National Clinicians Post-Exposure Prophylaxis
Hotline (PEPline) - (888) HIV-4911
47National HIV/AIDS Clinicians Consultation Center
- A Joint Program of UCSF
- and San Francisco General Hospital
- Supported by HRSA and CDC
- http//www.ucsf.edu/hivcntr
- PEPLine (888) 448-4911
- Warmline (800) 933-3413