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Bugs and Drugs: A Review of Infectious Diseases and Substance Use Diana L. Sylvestre, MD Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine University of CA, San Francisco Executive Director Organization to Achieve Solutions in Substance-Abuse (O.A.S.I.S.) Acute Bacterial Infections • Responsible for 60% of hospital admissions among IDUs • Challenges – Differentiate occult infection from intoxication/withdrawal – Recognize atypical presentations • Predisposing factors – Defective mucociliary funtion – Malnutrition – Altered cell-mediated immunity Cellulitis • Staph most common, strep is next • Predisposing behaviors – Mixing drugs with saliva – Licking needles – Poor injecting and personal hygiene • Tissue necrosis – Vasoactive opiates – Cocaine-induced vasospasm – Other contaminants Necrotizing Fasciitis – Streptococcus, mixed aer/anaerobes – More likely with “muscling” or “skin popping” – Classic presentation: pain way out of proportion to findings soon after injecting – Medical emergency – Note: increasing incidence of infections in large skeletal muscles, especially in patients with HIV Bacterial Infections, cont. • Wound botulism – Clostridium toxin causes paralysis – Classic presentation: • Dry, scratchy throat, followed by • Cranial nerve palsies followed by • Descending paralysis – Treatment: • Find the source • Antibiotics • Long-term respiratory support Bacterial Endocarditis –Fever and heart murmur –IDUs younger and without preexisting valvular disease –>50% staph, ~15% strep –More likely to require surgery –HIV does not increase risk Respiratory Infections • Predisposing factors: – Cigarettes – Alcohol – Altered MS and loss of gag reflex – HIV • Up to 1/3 of IDUs with fever have pneumonia • Increased incidence of H flu, S. aureus, Ps. aeruginosa relative to non-IDUs Tuberculosis • IDUs have increased risk of Tb reactivation – Reason is unknown • • • • • Increased risk of MDR TB Cough, blood-tinged sputum, malaise Later: night sweats, wt loss PPD negative in 25% at diagnosis 1/6 extrapulmonary risk increased to 60-80% in HIV TB Recommendations • Yearly PPD unless previously positive • PPD positive: – HIV+: 5 mm • 12 mo chemoprophylaxis with INH, 300mg/d with B6 – HIV-: 10 mm • 6 mo chemoprophylaxis with INH/B6 – If PPD+, R/O active TB: CXR, cultures • INH, rifampin, pyrazinamide: liver toxicity • Rifampin lowers methadone levels STDs • Higher rates of – Syphilis • Annual RPR recommended – HPV • Increased risk of cervical cancer with certain serotypes – Chlamydia and GC • Cervical culture/DNA, urine screen available Hepatitis A/B • HAV: fecal-oral transmission • HBV: Most common cause of reported cases of acute hepatitis • Transmitted sexually, by blood, and vertically • Chronic infection in <5% adults, >90% perinatally Hepatitis D • Defective virus, only occurs in presence of active HBV • More aggressive disease • HBV vaccination is protective HIV • In US: – 750,000 cases – 40,000 new infections per year • 26% due to IDU, 19% male, 6% female • 25% of HIV-infected persons in the US are coinfected with HCV • 50-93% of HIV-infected IDUs are coinfected AIDS • Over the past few years, the numbers of newly reported cases of AIDS in IDUs has surpassed the numbers in MSM • Women with AIDS: – 42% from IDU • Men with AIDS: – 22% from IDU • Most common reason for death: liver disease (HCV) HIV in IDUs • Increasing reports of significant HIV infection rates in non-injection drug users – Probably sexual transmission – Disinhibiting effects of: • Alcohol, amphetamines, cocaine, inhalants • Substantially increased seroprevalence rates in crack users HIV in IDUs • Among IDUs, the risk of HIV infection increases with: – Duration of injection drug use – Frequency of needle sharing – Number of sharing partners, especially in shooting galleries – Little or no condom use – Multiple sexual partners – Comorbid psychiatric conditions such as ASPD – Use of cocaine in injectable form or smoked as crack – Use of injection drugs in a geographic location with a high prevalence of HIV infection. Preventing Transmission in IDUs • Needle exchange effective at reducing HIV transmission and does not increase use of injection drugs • Counsel re: heterosexual transmission • No breastfeeding HIV Tests • HIV antibodies appear 2-12 weeks after infection • HIV RNA: – Determine prognosis (primary) • CD4+ T cell count is best indicator of the immediate state of immunologic competence in a patient with HIV HAART • Highly-active anti-retroviral therapy • Has resulted in marked declines in the majority of AIDS-defining conditions • HAART involves the use of 3 or more antiviral medications, typically in 2 categories Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors • NRTI’s: nucleoside analogues – AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC, ABC – Nonselective, serious side effects – Methadone may reduce blood levels: ddI, stavudine • NNRTI’s: non-nucleoside RTIs – – – – Nevirapine, delarvadine, efavirenz Very selective for HIV-1 RT Rash, neuropsychiatric toxicity Methadone level reduced: nevirapine, efavirenz Protease Inhibitors • Saquinavir, indinavir, ritonavir, nelfinavir, amprenavir • Ritonavir “boosting” is common • Lipodystrophy syndrome: – Hyperlipidemia, insulin resistance – Fat redistribution • Methadone level reduced – Ritonavir, nelfinavir, lopinavir Hepatitis C • • • • 4 million cases in US, 170 million worldwide 60% of new and existing cases related to IDU Seroprevalence in IDU 65-96% Transmitted by blood: needles, syringes, cottons, cookers, rinsewater • Sexual transmission rare, ~5% – STD’s, multiple sexual partners • Vertical transmission rare, ~5% Hepatitis C • • • • 8-16% develop cirrhosis after 2 decades Accelerated disease with HIV Accelerated disease with EtOH Drug use not known to accelerate natural course HCV Testing • LFT’s normal persistently in ~1/4 with active disease • HCV antibody: EXPOSURE, NOT active infection – ~25% spontaneously clear • HCV viral load – Indicates ACTIVE disease, not extent of disease • HCV genotype – By far the best predictor of response to therapy – Determines length of therapy HCV Treatment • Cornerstone of treatment is interferon/ribavirin combination therapy for 24-48 weeks • Interferon administered by injection • Ribavirin administered PO • Outcome measure: – Sustained virologic response (SVR) • Lack of virus 6 months after completing therapy • 54-56% with current therapy Needlestick Injuries • Risk of transmission from needlestick injury is HIV<HCV<HBV: – 0.3% with HIV – 1.8% with HCV (6x higher) – 6-30% with HBV (50x higher) Vaccinations • dT every 10 years – > 5 years if tetanus-prone wound • HAV • HBV • Pneumovax: – >50, HIV • Flu