Title: BIOE 301
1BIOE 301
- Lecture Three
- Leading Causes of Mortality, Ages 15-44
Geoff Preidis MD/PhD candidate Baylor College of
Medicine preidis_at_post.harvard.edu
2(No Transcript)
3Review of Lecture TwoLeading Causes of
Mortality, Birth-Age 4
- Developing world
- Perinatal conditions
- Lower respiratory infections
- Diarrheal diseases
- Malaria
- Developed world
- Perinatal conditions
- Congenital anomalies
- Lower respiratory infections
- Unintentional injuries
41. Perinatal Conditions
- Question What is the 1 way to prevent
septicemia in a newborn in the developing world?
51. Perinatal Conditions
http//www.path.org/projects/clean-delivery_kit.ph
p
62. Lower Respiratory Infections
- Question How can a busy health worker (or a
parent) quickly screen for pneumonia in a child?
72. Lower Respiratory Infections
83. Diarrheal Diseases
- Question What is the 1 way to prevent diarrheal
illness in a newborn?
93. Diarrheal Diseases
104. Malaria
- Questions
- 1. Why has malaria been eradicated from the
southern U.S.? How can these principles be
applied to less developed countries?
114. Malaria
- Reduced human/insect contact
- Prevent mosquito breeding
- Use insect repellents, mats, coils
- Residual treatment of interior walls
- Wear long sleeves/pants
- Insecticide-treated mosquito bed nets
- Treatment of those who have malaria
- prevent its spread!
- Questions
- 2. What are the challenges for implementing this
technology in developing countries?
124. Malaria
- What are the challenges for implementing this
technology in developing countries? - Mapping areas that are difficult to access
- Poor communication
- Direction Transfer of vector control efforts
from malaria control authorities to local primary
health care center - Financial support decreased standard of living
from wars, environmental factors, migration - Corruption, graft
- Questions
- 3. Where is the malaria vaccine?
134. Malaria
- Where is the malaria vaccine?
- Funding
- Thousands of antigens presented to the human
immune system -gt which ones are useful targets? - Plasmodium has many life stages -gt different
antigens at each stage - Plasmodium has several strategies to confuse,
hide, and misdirect the human immune system - Multiple malaria infections of the different
species and different strains of the same species
may occur in one host!
http//www.cdc.gov/malaria/images/graphs/malaria_l
ifecycle.gif
- Questions
- 4. How does Chloroquine protect you when you
travel?
144. Malaria
http//sickle.bwh.harvard.edu
15Leading Causes of Mortality Ages 15-44
- Developing World
- HIV/AIDS
- Unintentional injuries
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Tuberculosis
- Developed World
- Unintentional injuries
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Cancer
- Self-inflicted injuries
161. HIV/AIDS
- Burden of HIV/AIDS
- Pathophysiology of HIV
- Clinical course of HIV/AIDS
- Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy
- Historical Perspective of HIV/AIDS
- Discussion Is HAART really feasible in
developing countries?
17Burden of HIV/AIDS
- Worldwide
- 39.5 million people are living with HIV/AIDS
- 20 million people have been killed by the disease
- 2006
- 2.9 million deaths
- 4.3 million new HIV infections (400,000 more than
in 2004) - 40 of new infections occurred in young people
(ages 15-24) - 2/3 of those with AIDS and 3/4 of all AIDS deaths
are in sub-Saharan Africa - In the past 2 years, the number of HIV-infected
people rose in every region in the world
Source 2006 AIDS Epidemic Update, UNAIDS/WHO
18AIDS has Reduced Life Expectancy
19Burden of HIV/AIDS
- United States
- 1.2 million people have HIV/AIDS (prevalence)
- 30,000-40,000 new infections per year (incidence)
- Only 7 countries in the world have more people
living with HIV than the U.S. - Routes of transmission
- Unsafe sex between men (44)
- Unprotected heterosexual intercourse (34)
- Non-sterile drug injection equipment (17)
20Burden of HIV/AIDS in the U.S.
- Racial and ethnic minorities are
disproportionately affected - 50 of AIDS diagnoses are in African-Americans
(12 pop) - 20 of AIDS diagnoses are in Hispanics (14 pop)
- The rate of new HIV diagnoses was 21x higher in
African-American women than in white women - Women are increasingly affected
- The proportion of of women among new HIV/AIDS
diagnoses have risen from 15 to 27 in 10 years - Question Why is the total number of HIV infected
people in the U.S. continuing to increase?
21Burden of HIV/AIDS in the U.S.
- Anti-retroviral therapy has accounted for an 80
decrease in AIDS death rates in the last decade - Annual cost to treat 15 billion
22Pathophysiology of HIV/AIDS
HIV Structure
Envelope Proteins
gp120
Envelope
gp41
Matrix Proteins
p17
Core Proteins
p14
RT
RNA
Integrase
Protease
http//bayloraids.org/curriculum/
23Pathophysiology of HIV/AIDS
http//bayloraids.org/curriculum/
24Pathophysiology of HIV/AIDS
http//bayloraids.org/curriculum/
25Clinical Course of HIV/AIDS
- HIV Infection
- Spread by sexual contact with infected person or
sharing needles with infected person or by
transmission from mother to child - Virus deposited on mucosal surface
- Acute infection (flu like symptoms)
- Viral dissemination
- HIV-specific immune response
- Replication of virus
- Destruction of CD4 lymphocytes
- Rate of progression is correlated with viral load
- Latent Period
26Clinical Course of HIV/AIDS
27Clinical Course of HIV/AIDS
http//hivinsite.ucsf.edu/topics/aids_basics
28Clinical Course of HIV/AIDS
http//bayloraids.org/curriculum/
29Clinical Course of HIV/AIDS
- AIDS
- Immunologic dysregulation
- Opportunistic infections and cancers
- Risk of infections is correlated with number of
CD4 lymphocytes - Average patient with AIDS dies in 1-3 years
- Within 10 years of infection (w/o Rx)
- 50 of patients develop AIDS
- 40 develop illness associated with HIV
- 5-10 remain asymptomatic
30Clinical Course of HIV/AIDS
31HIV/AIDS Therapy
- Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor enzymes (1987)
- Enzyme is specific to HIV
- Combinations of RTIs appear effective
- HIV Protease Inhibitors (1995)
- HIV proteases are distinct from mammalian
proteases - Most significant advance in HIV therapy yet
- Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART)
- Combination of three or more drugs
- Fusion inhibitors (2003)
- Subject of new research
32HIV/AIDS Therapy
- HIV can rapidly mutate to quickly develop
resistance to a single drug - Resistance develops much more slowly to drug
combinations - Goal of HAART
- Reduce viral levels
to undetectable levels - Has reduced death
rate in US and Europe
by 80
33HIV/AIDS Therapy
http//www.aids-ed.org
346 million people living with AIDS in developing
countries are in need of HAART. 90 are in just
34 countries
http//www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
Id4724368
35HIV/AIDS Therapy
- Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission
(PMTCT) - 3 routes of transmission
- Parentally (during pregnancy)
- Perinatally (during delivery)
- Breast feeding (through milk)
- 4 Core interventions
- HIV testing and counseling
- ARV prophylaxis (ZDV, NVP)
- Safer delivery practices
- Safer infant-feeding practices
- Reduces transmission from 30-40 to 4-6
36HIV/AIDS Historical Perspective
- 1981
- CDC reported unexplained PCP in 5 previously
healthy, homosexual men - CDC reported Kaposis sarcoma in 26 previously
healthy, homosexual men - 1981-1982
- Increased association with IV drug use,
recipients of blood transfusions, hemophiliacs - 1983
- Virus isolated
37HIV/AIDS Historical Perspective
- August 23, 1982
- Homosexual Plague Strikes New Victims
- Cites evidence from the CDC
- The 4-H Club
38HIV/AIDS Historical Perspective
- 1985
- ELISA approved, began screening U.S. blood supply
- 1987
- AZT (RTI) approved by FDA, costs 12,000 per year
- 1995
- First Protease Inhibitor approved, makes HAART
possible - 2003
- First Fusion Inhibitor approved
- 2005
- NIH funds CHAVI (Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine
Immunology) - Today
- NRTIs, NNRTIs, Protease Inhibitors, Fusion
Inhibitors - Integrase Inhibitors??? Vaccine development???
39Discussion
- For the average AIDS patient in developing
countries therapy is an inaccessible dream, and
merely a diversion for developing country health
ministries from more pressing concerns which
threatens more cost-effective programs against
HIV.... Since nothing will likely bridge this gap
between poor and rich countries, only prevention
and a vaccine will likely make a real difference
for the poor in the battle against HIV/AIDS. - --Hirschel B, Francioli P. Progress and problems
in the fight against AIDS. - NEJM 1998 Mar 26338(13)853-60.
402. Unintentional Injuries
412. Unintentional Injuries
- Burden of Unintentional Injuries
- Accident Physics
- Slowed Driver Reaction Time
- Prevention of Road Accidents
42Burden of Unintentional Injuries
- More than 1.25 million people ages 15-44 die from
unintentional injuries each year - 1 million deaths in developing countries, 1/4
million in developed countries - 40x this number are injured
- Major cause of disability
- Leading cause is road accidents
- 500,000 deaths per year in this age group
- 90 of these deaths occur in developing countries
43Burden of Road Accidents in the US
- Rates declining steadily
- A leading cause of potential years of life lost
- 2004
- 42,636 Americans killed
- 2,788,000 Americans injured
- Fatal accident rates gt4X higher for males than
for females - Motorcycles 40X higher death rate per mile
traveled - 39 of fatalities related to alcohol use
44Accident Physics
- Newtons 2nd Law
- F m a
- a dv/dt
- a initial velocity/time to come to rest
- In a crash
- Velocity slows to zero in a very short time
- Generates large forces
- How can we reduce these forces?
- Reduce initial velocity of impact
- Extend time that it takes passengers to come to
rest
45Accident Physics
- 1. Reduce initial velocity of impact
- Excessive speed contributes to
- 30 of deaths in developed countries
- 50 of deaths in developing countries
46Slowed Driver Reaction Time
- When drivers anticipate a crash, they have time
to brake and reduce initial velocity - Factors which slow driver reaction time
- Alcohol use
- Mobile phone use
- Poor visibility
- Driver inexperience
47Slowed Driver Reaction Time
- Alcohol impaired drivers have 17X increased risk
of being in fatal crash - Alcohol use increases risk more in younger
drivers - 1 in 5 Americans will be involved in an
alcohol-related crash at some time in their lives - TX BAC limit
- 0.08 g/dl is illegal
- Approx 3 drinks in a
140 lb individual - Significant driving
impairment at just
0.04 BAC!
48Slowed Driver Reaction Time
- Mobile phone use
- At any given daylight moment in US
- 10 of drivers are using a cell phone
- Increases driver reaction time by 0.5-1.5
sections - Risk of crash is 4X higher when using a mobile
phone - Same as driving with a BAC of 0.09 g/ dl
- 4 states and D.C. have banned use of hand held
phones while driving (NY, NJ, CT, CA) - Partial bans in AR, AZ, FL, GA, IL, ME, MA, MN,
NH, NM, OH, PA, TN, VA
49Prevention of Road Accidents
- 2. Extending Time to Come to Rest
- Crumple zones
- Allow passengers additional time to decelerate
- Seat belts
- Keep occupants in the passenger compartment
- Stretch during impact
- Reduce risk of death in crash by 40-60
- http//www.regentsprep.org/Regents/physics/phys01/
accident/nobelt.htm - http//www.regentsprep.org/Regents/physics/phys01/
accident/withbelt.htm - Air bags
- When combined with seat belts, reduce risk of
serious and fatal injuries by 40-65 - http//www.nhtsa.dot.gov/staticfiles/DOT/NHTSA/Com
munication2020Consumer20Information/Multimedia
/Associated20Files/crashdum2.ram - http//www.accidentreconstruction.com/movies/5thpe
r.mov - Child restraints
- Reduce risk of infant death by 71 and toddler
death by 54 - http//www.nhtsa.dot.gov/staticfiles/DOT/NHTSA/Com
munication2020Consumer20Information/Multimedia
/Associated20Files/crashdum3.ram
50Prevention of Road Accidents
- Legislation
- Speed
- Seat belts, Car seats, Air Bags
- Alcohol use
- Motorcycle helmets
- Engineering
- Restraints
- Safety standards
- Education
- Seat belts, Car seats, Air Bags
- Alcohol use
51Prevention of Road Accidents
- Motorcycle helmets
- Layer of foam designed to crush upon impact,
extending time for head to come to rest - Laws in Texas
- Texas exempts riders 21 or older if they either
- 1) can show proof of successfully completing a
motorcycle operator training and safety course - Or
- 2) can show proof of having a medical insurance
policy
http//www.iihs.org/laws/state_laws/helmet_current
.html2
523. Cardiovascular Diseases
- 768,000 people ages 15-44 die as a result of
cardiovascular disease every year - Most common causes
- Ischemic heart disease (286,000 deaths)
- Cerebrovascular disease (159,000 deaths)
- Will be covered in depth in Lecture 4
53Tuberculosis
www.ohsu.edu/library/hom/exhibits/exhimages/200501
tb/openair_pavilions.jpg
544. Tuberculosis
- Burden of Tuberculosis
- Natural History of TB Infection
- Diagnosis of Tuberculosis
- Drug Resistance
- Tuberculosis Treatment
- Directly Observed Therapy
- TB in This Century
55Burden of Tuberculosis
- Bacterial infection of the lungs caused by
Mycobacterium tuberculosis - Bacterium infects 1 in 3 people on the planet
- Drugs that cure TB were discovered in 1940s
- Results in death in 5 years in half of cases if
untreated - Kills 600,000 people ages 15-44 each year
- Estimated that TB will kill 35 million people in
next 20 years if situation does not change - 2004
- 8.9 million new cases (incidence)
- Growing 1/year
- 1.7 million deaths
- 98 of deaths occur in developing world
http//www.who.int/tb
56Burden of Tuberculosis
- 1/3 of worlds population is infected with TB
- Not all have active TB
- Most have latent TB - Immune system has walled
off bacilli with waxy coat - 5-10 of people with normal immune systems will
go on to develop active TB - Higher in people with compromised immune systems
(10X higher in people with AIDS) - TB is leading cause of death among people with
HIV/AIDS - http//www.npr.org/rundowns/segment.php?wfId15206
99 - Follows poverty and urban crowding
- Particularly severe in
- AIDS patients
- Those who can't afford medical care
- Noncompliant patients.
57(No Transcript)
58Natural History of TB Infection
http//www.health.vic.gov.au
59Natural History of TB Infection
- Primary TB
- Latent TB
- Secondary, or reactivation, TB
60Natural History of TB Infection
- TB and AIDS
- People with AIDS are 10x more likely to develop
active TB once infected - TB is the leading cause of death among HIV
positive individuals, accounting for 13 of AIDS
deaths worldwide
www.ourjeet.com/images/twinepidemics.gif
61Natural History of TB Infection
- Active TB
- Symptoms
- Fever
- Night sweats
- Weight loss
- Weakness
- Coughs (productive with bloody sputum)
- Airborne transmission
- Left untreated, one person with active TB can
cough millions of infectious droplets into the air
62Diagnosis of Tuberculosis
- Skin test (PPD)
- Serum test
- CXR
- Shows nodules in active TB
- Sputum
- Acid-fast bacilli
63Drug Resistance
- Selective pressure Darwins theory of survival
of the fittest - Resistance is expected
- Factors can reduce development of resistance
- Finish a course of antibiotics
- Only those who need antibiotics
- Narrow spectrum
64Drug Resistance
- How does an organism acquire drug resistance?
- Mutation and selection
- Exchange of genes between strains and species
Source Essential Biochemistry
65Drug Resistance
- Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) TB
- Can develop if patients do not take all medicine
- Growing problem
- Present in all countries
- 425,000 new cases per year
- In Russia and China, 14 of new cases are
resistant - Must be treated with second-line antibiotics
- Poorly supervised Rx is worse than no Rx
- Extensive Drug Resistant (XDR) TB
- Not only resistant to first-line drugs, but also
to 3 or more of the 6 second-line drugs - Identified in every region of the world, esp
Russia - High fatality rate
- 4 of MDR-TB cases in the US are XDR
66Tuberculosis Treatment
- Isoniazid
- 1 in 106 organisms is resistant to Isoniazid
- Adverse Effects liver toxicity
- Rifampin
- 1 in 108 organisms is resistant to Rifampin
- Adverse Effects liver toxicity, interactions
with other meds, red bodily fluids (tears, urine) - Ethambutol
- 1 in 106 organisms is resistant to Ethambutol
- Adverse Effects eye damage
- Poll Which drug(s)?
- How long? 2 weeks, 6 months or 2 years?
67Tuberculosis Treatment
- By treating with just one drug
- 2 weeks 25 chance of resistant organisms
- 6 months 60 chance of resistant organisms
- 2 years 80 chance of resistant organisms
- The probability of developing resistance to 2
unrelated agents is the product of probabilities - 1 in 106 x 1 in 108 1 in 1014
- Spontaneous evolution of MDR bacillus is
exceedingly rare
68Tuberculosis Treatment
- Active TB
- Can almost always be cured by taking several
antibiotics in combination - Isoniazid, Rifampin, Ethambutol, etc
- Stay home for several weeks while contagious
- Take drugs for 6 months-2 years, depending on
resistance - If resistance develops, add at least 2 new drugs
- Latent TB
- Treated with Isoniazid for 9 months, prevents
development of active TB
69Directly Observed Therapy (DOT)
- A health care worker watches and helps as the
patient swallows anti-TB medicines in his/her
presence. - DOTS shifts responsibility for cure from patient
to health care system - Requires political commitment, accurate
diagnosis, quality drugs, observation, follow up - DOTS works well in many developing countries
70Directly Observed Therapy (DOT)
- 6 month supply is 10
- Cure rates of up to 95 even in poorest countries
- 17 million patients worldwide have been treated
with DOT since 1995 - 25 of worlds population does not have access to
DOT.
71Directly Observed Therapy (DOT)
- With HIV?
- Controversial
- Requiring DOT may impose substantial barriers to
drugs in resource-poor countries - HIV is more stigmatizing than TB
- Does directly observed therapy prevent more HIV
mortality and transmission than self-administered
therapy?
72Directly Observed Therapy (DOT)
- Clinical Trial
- Question Does combined directly observed therapy
for HIV and TB decrease HIV mortality in a
resource-limited developing country? - NIH study in resource-poor Durban, South Africa
- 2 groups of patients Group 1 will undergo DOT
for HIV and TB simultaneously. Group 2 will
undergo DOTS for TB and HIV therapy without DOT - Primary outcome Diagnosis of an AIDS-defining
illness 18-month mortality
http//clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00091936
73TB in the Last Century
- TB incidence declined in the 1960s and 1970s.
Incidence increased in the 1980s. - Why?
- Drug prescription practices followed the
previously mentioned guidelines. - Why did therapy fail?
74Overlapping Epidemics
- TB and HIV
- TB is the leading killer of people with HIV
- In Africa, half of all TB cases are associated
with HIV. - Malaria and HIV
- For people with HIV, especially pregnant women,
episodes of acute malaria are complicated and
more serious.
75Discussion Pandemic control in Cuba
- Cubas early strategy to control HIV/AIDS
- Massive mandatory HIV testing
- Contact tracing
- Lifetime quarantine
- Public AIDS education
- How much deprivation of freedom are you willing
to tolerate to eliminate the risknot the
certaintythat someone will endanger others?
Zonana VF. Los Angeles Times, 4 November 1988.
76Leading Causes of Mortality Ages 15-44
- Developing World
- HIV/AIDS
- Unintentional injuries
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Tuberculosis
- Developed World
- Unintentional injuries
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Cancer
- Self-inflicted injuries
773. Cancer
- 580,000 people ages 15-44 die as a result of
cancer every year - Most common causes
- Liver Cancer (68,000 deaths per year)
- Leukemias (65,000)
- Stomach Cancer (58,000)
- Breast Cancer (57,000)
- Will be covered in depth in Lecture 4
784. Self-Inflicted Injuries
- Burden of self-inflicted injuries
- Risk factors associated with suicide
- Methods of suicide
- Screening and prevention
79Burden of Self-Inflicted Injuries
- 480,000 people ages 15-44 take their own lives
each year (4th leading cause of death) - Unipolar depressive disorder ranks 1 for DALYs
in this age group in developed countries - Second to HIV/AIDS in developing countries
- Highest rate of completed suicides
- Men gt65 years old
- Highest rate of attempted suicides
- Men and women ages 20-24
80Risk Factors Associated with Suicide
- Psychiatric illness
- Affective, substance abuse, personality, other
mental disorders - Other risk factors
- Social adjustment problems
- Serious medical illness
- Living alone
- Recent bereavement
- Personal history of suicide attempt or completion
- Divorce or separation
- Unemployment
81Methods of Suicide
- Most common
- Firearms are used in 60 of suicides
- 2nd leading cause
- Men Hanging
- Women Drug overdose or poison
- Alcohol is involved in 25-40 of suicides
- Women attempt suicide more often men
are more often successful
82Screening and Prevention
- 50-66 of all suicide victims visit physician lt1
month before event - 10-40 in the preceding week
- Hard to identify who is at risk
- Direct questioning has low yield
- General questions about sleep disturbance,
depressed mood, guilt and hopelessness - Survey instruments arent good at predicting what
will happen
83Screening and Prevention
- How do we quantify the efficacy of such
questionnaires? - Goal of screening
- Catch as many positives as possible, even at the
risk of some false positives - Sensitivity
- Se probability of testing positive if you will
commit suicide - Sensitivity of best questionnaires 56 (low)
84Screening and Prevention
- How many false positives result?
- Positive predictive value
- PPVprobability of committing suicide if you test
positive - PPV of best questionnaires 3 (pathetic)
85Screening and Prevention
S IG E C A P S
86Selected Preventable Causes of Death
- HIV/AIDS 2,886,000
- TB 1,664,000
- Malaria 1,124,000
- Diarrheal diseases 2,001,000
- Perinatal conditions 2,504,000
- Childhood diseases 1,318,000
- Lung cancer 1,213,000
- Traffic accidents 1,194,000
- Suicide 849,000
- War 230,000
- Source The World Health Report 2002, WHO
87Who is helping?
- Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria
(GFATM) - Responds to intertwining threats by underwriting
expanded treatment programs - Gates Foundation
- 186 million to fight malaria
- 200 million with NIH for childhood vaccines,
insect control, nutrition, new treatments - WHO/UNAIDS
88(No Transcript)
89The Global Fund ARVs
90Disease Burden and Funding
SOURCE MALARIA RD ALLIANCE
91Summary of Lecture 3
- Developing World
- HIV/AIDS
- Unintentional injuries
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Tuberculosis
- Developed World
- Unintentional injuries
- Cardiovascular diseases
- Cancer
- Self-inflicted injuries
92Assignments Due Next Time