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HIV/AIDS in Special Populations: Management and Treatment Updates for Pharmacists Pamela M. Moye, Pharm.D., BCPS, AAHIVP Clinical Associate Professor/Clinical Specialist Mercer University College of Pharmacy Disclosure I do not have (nor does any immediate family member have) actual or potential conflict of interest, within the last twelve months; a vested interest in or affiliation with any corporate organization offering financial support or grant monies for this continuing education activity; or any affiliation with an organization whose philosophy could potentially bias my presentation. Learning Objectives After completing this course, learners will better understand: ◦ the epidemiology, replication cycle and sites of drug activity for HIV virus ◦ the risk and challenges that special populations have with regard to living with HIV/AIDS ◦ the critical issues and risks factors for HIV/AIDS special populations as they relate to HIV/AIDS treatment, adherence and care ◦ the common laboratory parameters, key adverse effects, and other monitoring parameters that are used for disease progression as well as safety and effectiveness of ARV treatment in special populations ◦ appropriate antiretroviral management strategies for HIV-infected patients in special populations ◦ the procedures/policies of how to order HIV specialty drugs Historical Perspective June 1981 – 1st cases of PCP among healthy young men reported April 1984 – HIV isolated March 1987 – AZT approved: first licensed therapy for HIV December 1995 – Saquinavir approved: first protease inhibitor December 2002 –16 drugs from 4 classes available for treatment Choose Your Weapon… AZT Double No effective therapy monotherapy nucelosides 1980 1990 Early HAART Standard of care HAART 2000 6 1/2 classes 2016 Incidence HIV infection has now spread to every country in the world ~40 million people are currently living with HIV ~25 million have died from the disease In the US ~1 million people are currently infected EVERY 9.5 MINUTES SOMEONE IN THE U.S. IS INFECTED WITH HIV These are the 10 states or dependent areas reporting the highest number of HIV diagnoses in 2014: Florida Georgia Maryland Texas North Carolina California New Jersey Louisiana Illinois New York 1. California 2. Florida 3. Texas 4. New York 5. Georgia 6. Illinois 7. New Jersey 8. North Carolina 9. Louisiana 10.Maryland MS is a 55-yr-old White woman coming to her first appointment at the ambulatory care clinic. As you take her medical history, she mentions that other than her diabetes and an ovarian cyst a few years ago she feels great. You ask her if she has ever been tested for HIV. She says no and also says that she is confident that she has not acquired HIV. Is there a basis for you to encourage/discourage her to be tested at this time? Screening CDC Recommendations for HIV Testing of Adult Patients In all healthcare settings, screening for HIV infection should be performed routinely for all patients aged 13-64 years of age unless local prevalence has been documented to be < 0.1% All pregnant women CDC MMWR Recomm Rep. 2013;62(RR-5):1-17. Transmission Modes of Transmission Sexual exposure to an HIV-infected person Mucocutaneous (e.g. splash in eye, mouth or on broken skin) parenteral exposure to HIV-infected body fluids (e.g., needlestick injuries) Mother-to-child transmission of HIV infection (MTCT) ◦ Up to 90% of transmission occurs during last 2 months of pregnancy with up to 65% of MTCT occurring during intrapartum period AIDS 2006; 20:805-12 In the United States, HIV is spread mainly by______________. Monitoring and Disease Progression Initial Laboratory Evaluations for HIV(+) Patients Test Rationale Result Frequency and comments HIV Staging and Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) Monitoring CD4 Count Staging and prognosis Reported in cells/µL Repeat every 3 - 6 months Plasma HIV RNA Provides marker for pace of HIV progression determines indication for and response to ART Reported in copies/mL For patients on new or modified ART regimen: perform 2 - 8 weeks after initiation or change in ART Untreated pts, detectable and measured upper limit of detection (>500,000 copies/mL). Pts taking ART, ideally suppressed to undetectable levels (usually <50 or ≤75 copies/mL). Resistance Testing Assess ART to which the pt's HIV virus is likely to be resistant ART= antiretroviral therapy, ARV= antiretroviral For patients on stable ART: perform every 3 - 6 months. Genotype: detects specific mutations to ART Genotype (one time) recommended in all ARV naive patients Phenotype: measures HIV viral replication in the presence of ART Modification of ART Treatment failure AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 11, 2016 Initial Laboratory Evaluations for HIV (+) Patients Test Rationale Result Frequency and comments HIV Staging and Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) Monitoring CBC w Diff Detects cytopenias, calculation of CD4. Normal Repeat every 3 - 4 months Abnormal Requires follow-up evaluation as indicated; may influence choice of ARTs. CMP Renal dysfunction, electrolytes, LFT to detect HCV, HIV nephropathy [assoc. infections] Normal/Abnormal Repeat every 6-12 months, and as needed to monitor ART. Lipid Panel Baseline before starting ART Normal Repeat annually or more frequently (every 4-8 weeks) based on initial results, ARVT use, or risk of cardiovascular disease. Abnormal Monitoring during ART Treat for dyslipidemia AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 11, 2016. Initial Laboratory Evaluations for HIV (+) Patients Test Rationale Result Frequency and comments Other Opportunistic Infection Screening Tests Toxoplasma gondii IgG Detects exposure; if (+), increased risk of developing CNS toxoplasmosis if CD4 count <100 cells/µL Normal/negative Repeat if patient becomes symptomatic or when CD4 count drops to ≤100 cells/µL. PPD (tuberculin skin test) (if no history of TB or positive PPD) Detects latent TB infection Normal Repeat every 6-12 months. Repeat if CD4 count was <200 cells/µL on initial test but increases to >200 cells/µL Abnormal (≥5 mm) Evaluate for active TB Hepatitis A, B, and C Serologies STD Panel (chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphillis) AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org April 11, 2016 Other Assessment and Monitoring Studies HLA-B*5701 screening ◦ Recommended before starting ABC, to reduce risk of hypersensitivity reaction (HSR) ◦ HLA-B*5701-positive patients should not receive ABC ◦ Positive status should be recorded as an ABC allergy ◦ If HLA-B*5701 testing is not available, ABC may be initiated after counseling and with appropriate monitoring for HSR Coreceptor tropism assay ◦ Should be performed when a CCR5 antagonist is being considered ◦ Phenotype assays have been used; genotypic test now available but has been studied less thoroughly ◦ Consider in patients with virologic failure on a CCR5 antagonist (though does not rule out resistance to CCR5 antagonist) AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 11, 2016. Health Care Maintenance Immunization of patients with HIV (no live virus vaccines if CD4 count ≤ 200/mm3) Influenza virus vaccine: Annually before the influenza season Pneumococcal vaccine: Once (ideally, before CD4 count < 200/mm3) Tetanus and diphtheria toxoid – same indication and schedule as patients without HIV infection Hepatitis B vaccine: For all susceptible patients Hepatitis A vaccine: For all at-risk patients AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 13, 2015 Goals of ART and Strategies to Achieve Goals Maximal and durable suppression of viral load Restoration and/or preservation of immunologic function Selection of ART Maximizing adherence Reduction of HIV-related morbidity and mortality Use of resistance testing in selected clinical settings Improvement of quality of life Prevent transmission ART= antiretroviral therapy AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 11, 2016. A 41-year-old woman was recently diagnosed with HIV infection, and the initial laboratory studies showed a CD4 count of 238 cells/mm3 and an HIV RNA level of 112,000 copies/ml. After several visits to the clinic and repeat laboratory studies that show similar results, she starts on an ART regimen of tenofovir-emtricitabine-elvitegravircobicistat (Stribild). According to the most recent update of DHHS antiretroviral guidelines, which of the following is TRUE regarding laboratory monitoring after starting this patient on antiretroviral therapy? A. The CD4 cell count is the most important laboratory test to obtain at 1 month after starting ART. B. A follow-up HIV RNA value should first be checked 10 to 12 weeks after starting therapy. C. A follow-up HIV RNA value should first be checked 2 to 4 weeks after starting therapy. What Happens with untreated HIV-1 Infection Plasma Levels Plasma Viral Load Peripheral Blood CD4+ T-Cell Count AIDS = CD4<200 Weeks Acute Infection Years Chronic Infection The Drugs The Ideal Antiretroviral Potent Easily administered Low cost High resistance barrier Effective as monotherapy Few adverse effects Few drug interactions Disturb latent HIV reservoirs Current ARV Medications NRTI PI Abacavir (ABC) Atazanavir (ATV) Fusion Inhibitor Didanosine (ddI) Darunavir (DRV) Enfuvirtide (ENF, T-20) Emtricitabine (FTC) Fosamprenavir (FPV) CCR5 Antagonist Indinavir (IDV) Maraviroc (MVC) Lamivudine (3TC) Stavudine (d4T) Tenofovir DF (TDF) Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) Zidovudine (AZT, ZDV NNRTI Lopinavir (LPV) Nelfinavir (NFV) Pharmacokinetic (PK) booster Saquinavir (SQV) Ritonavir (RTV) Tipranavir (TPV) Cobicistat (COBI) Delavirdine (DLV) Integrase Inhibitor (INSTI) Efavirenz (EFV) Dolutegravir (DTG) Etravirine (ETR) Elvitegravir (EVG) Nevirapine (NVP) Raltegravir (RAL) Rilpivirine (RPV) Available Combination Products Quad Therapy ◦ Stribild®: (elvitegravir, EVG/ cobicistat, COBI/ emtricitabine, FTC/ tenofovir, TDF) ◦ Genvoya®: (EVG/COBI/tenofovir alafenamide, TAF/FTC Triple Therapy ◦ Atripla®: (efavirenz, EFV/FTC/TDF) ◦ Complera®: (FTC/ rilpivirine, RPV/TDF) ◦ Odefsey®: (FTC/RPV/TAF) ◦ Triumeq®: (abacavir, ABC/ dolutegravir, DTG/ lamivudine, 3TC) ◦ Trizivir ®: (ABC/ lamivudine, 3TC/ zidovudine, ZDV) Dual Therapy ◦ Combivir®: (3TC/ZDV) ◦ Epzicom®: (ABC/3TC) ◦ Truvada®: (FTC/TDF) PI with Boosting Agent ◦ Evotaz®: (atazanavir, ATV/COBI) ◦ Kaletra®: (lopinavir/ritonavir) ◦ Prezcobix®: (darunavir, DTV/COBI) HIV Replication Cycle and Sites of Drug Activity Adapted:Levy JA. HIV and the Pathogenesis of AIDS. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: American Society for Microbiology; 1998:9-11 Integrase Inhibitors NRTIs NNRTIs Cellular DNA Protease Inhibitors Attachment Inhibitors New HIV particles Nucleus HIV Virions Reverse Integrase Transcriptase Protease Capsid proteins and viral RNA Entry Inhibitors Viral RNA Unintegrated double stranded Viral DNA CCR5 or CXCR4 co-receptor Integrated viral DNA Attachment 3 2 1 Uncoating Reverse Transcription Integration Viral mRNA 4 Transcription gag-pol polyprotein 5 Translation 6 Assembly and Release The Guidelines Initial ART Regimens: DHHS Categories Recommended ◦ Randomized controlled trials show optimal efficacy and durability ◦ Favorable tolerability and toxicity profiles Alternative ◦ Effective but have potential disadvantages ◦ May be the preferred regimen for individual patients Other ◦ May be selected for some patients but are less satisfactory than preferred or alternative regimens Panel on Antiretroviral Guidelines for Adults and Adolescents. Guidelines for the use of antiretroviral agents in HIV-1-infected adults and adolescents. Department of Health and Human Services. Available at http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/contentfiles/lvguidelines/AdultandAdolescentGL.pdf. Accessed April 11, 2016. Initial Regimens: Recommendations PI based INSTI based DRV/r (daily) + TDF/FTC1 (AI) DTG/ABC/3TC2; only if HLA-B*5701 negative (AI) DTG (daily) + TDF/FTC1 (AI) EVG/COBI/TDF/FTC1; only if pre-ART CrCl >70 mL/min (AI) EVG/COBI/TAF/FTC1; only if pre-ART CrCl ≥30 mL/min (AI) RAL + TDF/FTC1 (AI) 1. 3TC can be used in place of FTC and vice versa. TDF: caution if renal insufficiency. 2. Caution if HIV RNA >100,000 copies/mL, or if high risk of cardiovascular disease. TDF = tenofovir, FTC = emtricitabine, DRV/r = darunavir/ritonavir, RAL = raltegravir, EVG/COBI = Elvitegravir/cobicistat, DTG = dolutegravir, ABC = abacavir, 3TC = lamivudine, TAF= tenofovir alafenamide Panel on Antiretroviral Guidelines for Adults and Adolescents. Guidelines for the use of antiretroviral agents in HIV-1infected adults and adolescents. Department of Health and Human Services. Available at http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/contentfiles/lvguidelines/AdultandAdolescentGL.pdf. Accessed April 11, 2016. Special Populations Special Populations Adolescents Women and Pregnancy Older Patient Preventing Secondary Transmission The Adolescent The HIV-Infected Adolescent Heterogeneous group in numerous respects Most acquired HIV though sexual risk behaviors ◦ 26% of new HIV infections in United States are estimated to occur in youth aged 13-26 (2010) ◦ 57% of these are in young black/African Americans ◦ 75% in young MSM ◦ In 2010, CDC estimated that 60% of HIV-infected youth were undiagnosed Some infected perinatally or via blood products ◦ Usually heavily treatment experienced AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. The HIV-Infected Adolescent ART recommended for all Readiness and ability to adhere to ART should be carefully considered Support is needed to reduce barriers to adherence and maximize ART success Adult guidelines for ART usually appropriate for postpubertal adolescents ART= antiretroviral therapy AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Why do youth have lower rates of viral suppression, higher rates of virologic rebound and loss to follow-up? The HIV-Infected Adolescent Challenges to adherence: Denial and fear of HIV infection Misinformation Distrust of the medical establishment Fear and lack of belief in the effectiveness of medications Low self-esteem Unstructured and chaotic lifestyles Lack of familial and social support Unavailable or inconsistent access to care AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. The HIV-Infected Adolescent Special considerations: Preventing (and screening for) STDs (including HPV) Family planning counseling For females, gynecologic care, contraception (including interactions with ARVs); avoid EFV For transgender youth, sensitive psychosocial and health supports Prevention of HIV transmission ARV= antiretroviral AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Women and Pregnancy HPTN 064 HIV Prevalence 8% or greater in selected US populations 40 HIV-Infected Women In general, no sex differences in virologic efficacy of ART Some evidence of sex differences in metabolism and response to some ARVs Increased risk of certain ARV adverse effects: ◦ NVP-associated hepatotoxicity (especially if initiated at CD4 count >250 cells/µL) ◦ Lactic acidosis: avoid d4T + ddI, if possible ◦ Metabolic complications (eg, lipoaccumulation, elevated triglycerides, osteopenia/osteoporosis) d4T= stavudine, ddI= didanosine, ARV= antiretroviral AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. HIV-Infected Women Women of childbearing potential ◦ Offer preconception counseling and care ◦ Offer effective counseling and contraception to prevent unintended pregnancy ◦ For HIV-infected women who wish to conceive: ◦ inform as to options for preventing sexual transmission of HIV while attempting conception AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. HIV-Infected Women: Contraception ARV interactions with hormonal contraceptives: ◦ Oral agents: PIs and NNRTIs may increase or decrease levels of ethinyl estradiol, norethindrone, and norgestimate, and may cause contraceptive failure or estrogen or progestin adverse effects ◦ Consider alternative or additional contraceptive method if used with interacting ARVs ◦ Few data on transdermal patch, vaginal ring: cautions as above ◦ DMPA: few data; no significant interactions with EFV, NVP, NFV, NRTIs IUD: safe and effective AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. What % of all pregnancies that occur in the United States are unplanned? ART for Pregnant Women* Consistent use of condoms (male or female) recommended to reduce risk of HIV transmission and STD acquisition, regardless of contraceptive use Combination ART recommended for all HIV-infected pregnant women, regardless of CD4 count, HIV viral load, or clinical status Counsel on known benefits and risks of ART during pregnancy * See also the U.S. Public Health Services Task Force Recommendations for Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in Pregnant HIV-1-Infected Women for Maternal Health and Interventions to Reduce Perinatal HIV-1 Transmission in the United States. AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. ART for Pregnant Women To reduce risk of perinatal transmission: Combination ART, with maximal and sustained suppression of HIV RNA levels during pregnancy Perform resistance testing before starting ART, and for women on ART with detectable HIV RNA ◦ ART may be initiated before results are available; modify ARV regimen if indicated based on resistance test results ART= antiretroviral therapy, ARV= antiretroviral AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. ART for Pregnant Women Efavirenz Teratogenic in nonhuman primates Risk of neural tube defects occurs during the first 5-6 weeks of pregnancy, and pregnancy usually is not recognized before 4-6 weeks of pregnancy Do pregnancy test before starting EFV (women of childbearing potential) Counsel about potential risk to fetus and desirability of avoiding pregnancy while on EFV Use alternative ARV agent in women who are trying to conceive or who are not using effective contraception, if feasible AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. ART for Pregnant Women Zidovudine: IV ZDV infusion recommended during labor if maternal HIV RNA is ≥400 copies/mL (or is unknown) near time of delivery Consider omitting IV ZDV during labor if maternal HIV RNA is <400 copies/mL, but continue combination ART regimen during labor Report cases of prenatal ARV exposure to the Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry (http://www.apregistry.com) See U.S. PHS Task Force Guidelines for Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in Pregnant HIV-1-Infected Women AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Postpartum Management Continuation of ART for maternal health should be determined on same basis as for nonpregnant persons Note that ART adherence may worsen postpartum; specifically address and support adherence Breast-feeding is not recommended, owing to risk of postnatal transmission HIV-infected women should avoid premastication of food for the infant: associated with HIV transmission to child ART= antiretroviral therapy AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. A 20-year-old woman presents in early labor with no prenatal care and no prior HIV testing. She has a history of injection drug use for the past 18 months, but none in the past 3 weeks. After obtaining informed consent, a rapid HIV test is performed and it is positive; a confirmatory HIV test is ordered. Which one of the following would you recommended this woman in labor who has received no prior antiretroviral therapy? A. It is too late to offer antiretroviral therapy for the mother B. Begin zidovudine (Retrovir) by intravenous infusion C. Immediately start the mother on a combination oral ART The Older Patient HIV and the Older Patient In the U.S., approximately 30% of HIV-infected persons are ≥50 years of age Aging-related comorbidities may complicate management of HIV HIV may increase risk of comorbidities and may accelerate the aging process Limited data on effects of ARVs in older persons (eg, adverse effects, drug-drug interactions) ARV= antiretroviral AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Interplay of Age With Morbidity HIV infection Risk of “comorbidities” increases as individuals get older Aging Antiviral treatment ART= antiretroviral therapy HIV does not cause these illnesses However, HIV and/or ART may increase the risk HIV and the Older Patient: HIV Risk, Diagnosis, and Prevention Reduced mucosal and immunologic defenses and changes in risk behaviors may lead to increased risk of HIV acquisition and transmission HIV screening rates in older persons are low Older persons may have more advanced HIV at presentation and ART initiation ◦ Screen for HIV per CDC recommendations ◦ Sexual history, risk-reduction counseling, screening for STIs (as indicated) are important to general health care for HIVinfected and HIV-uninfected older persons AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. HIV and the Older Patient: ART “ART is recommended in patients >50 years of age, regardless of CD4 cell count” (BIII) Older persons have ↓ immune recovery and ↑ risk of non-AIDS events No data on specific ARVs in older persons; individualize ARV selection Monitor ART effectiveness and safety per general guidelines, but give special attention to renal, liver, cardiovascular, metabolic, and bone health ART= antiretroviral therapy, ARV= antiretroviral AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. HIV and the Older Patient: ART CD4 cell recovery on ART may be less robust in older patients (though virologic response appears to be the same as in younger patients) Starting ART at younger age may result in better outcomes (immunologic and perhaps clinical) Interactions between ARVs and other medications, as well as polypharmacy, may complicate care ART= antiretroviral therapy, ARV= antiretroviral AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. HIV and the Older Patient: ART Adherence: ◦ Some data suggest older HIV-infected patients may be more adherent to ART than younger patients ◦ However, many issues (eg, complex dosing requirements, cost, limited health literacy, neurocognitive impairment) may impact adherence ◦ Assess adherence regularly; facilitate adherence ART= antiretroviral therapy AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. HIV and the Older Patient: Complications and Comorbidities Non-AIDS illnesses (eg, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, cancer, bone fragility, and neurocognitive impairment) may have ↑ disease burden in aging HIV-infected persons Current primary care recommendations advise to identify and manage risks in HIV-infected as in HIV-uninfected individuals AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Example: Newly Diagnosed 61Year-Old Female Patient HIV infection ◦ CD4+ count: 275 cells/mm³; HIV-1 RNA: 97,234 copies/mL Osteopenia ◦ Wrist fracture Hypertension (lisinopril) Moderately reduced renal function ◦ eGFR 72 mL/min Hyperlipidemia (simvastatin) Anxiety/depression Migraines (ergotamine) Recommended Agents: Considerations for This Patient Agent Considerations for This Patient EFV Drug interactions with migraine medications DRV/RTV EVG/COBI Drug interactions with some statins Drug interactions with some migraine medications RAL Twice-daily administration TDF Osteopenia Decreased renal function ABC Borderline baseline HIV-1 RNA Cardiovascular risk ABC, abacavir; ATV, atazanavir; COBI cobicistat, DRV, darunavir; EVG elvitegravir; RAL, raltegravir; RTV, ritonavir; TDF, tenofovir. Medical Management Issues That May Affect ART Choices Osteoporosis Hyperlipidemia (statin) ◦ Interactions with PIs and COBI Hypertension (slightly decreased renal function) Migraine (ergotamine) ◦ Interactions with some PIs and COBI Preventing Secondary Transmission Preventing Secondary Transmission of HIV Prevention interventions are a key part of HIV care In the United States, the rate of new HIV infections stable Risk behaviors have ↑ since availability of effective ART STIs, genital irritation, substance and alcohol use, noncircumcision in men, and other conditions, ↑ risk of HIV transmission Recent data show that ART substantially ↓ risk of sexual transmission of HIV AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Preventing Secondary Transmission of HIV Essential components of HIV patient care: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Reinforce prevention messages Assess patient’s understanding of HIV transmission Assess patient’s HIV transmission behaviors Discuss strategies to prevent transmission (individualize) Detect and treat STIs For women: ◦ Pregnancy prevention counseling with those who wish to avoid pregnancy ◦ Preconception counseling with those who wish to become pregnant AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Preventing Secondary Transmission of HIV Tools for prevention of sexual and bloodborne HIV transmission: ◦ Consistent and effective use of ART (with sustained suppression of HIV RNA) ◦ Consistent condom usage ◦ Safer sexual and drug-use practices ◦ Detection and treatment of STIs Interventions in clinic settings are effective in changing sexual risk behavior ◦ CDC training materials: http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/research/prs/index.htm Interventions also effective in reducing risky injection drug-use behavior ◦ Behavioral interventions and opiate substitution with ◦ methadone AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Preventing Secondary Transmission of HIV: ART as Prevention ART may reduce risk of HIV transmission HIV viral load directly related to probability of HIV transmission; increased ART use and lower community viral load associated with lower HIV incidence Observational studies show lower rates of HIV transmission among serodiscordant heterosexual couples after viral suppression on ART In a large RTC of HIV-discordant heterosexual couples, those on ART had 96% reduction in HIV transmission to uninfected partners No RTC data in MSM and IDUs But, HIV has been detected in genital secretions of persons with controlled plasma HIV RNA Belief in efficacy of ART may lead to increases in risk behavior AETC National Resource Center, www.aidsetc.org Accessed April 21, 2016. Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) PrEP Studies: HIV transmission risk lowest when participants took PrEP consistently STUDY POPULATION OVERALL Reduction in risk of HIV infection iPrEx MSM 44% reduction in the risk of HIV acquisition (95% CI, 15-63) >90% High TDF2 1219 heterosexual men and women in Botswana 62% reduction risk (22-83%) --- Moderate Partners PrEP 4,718 HIV-discordant heterosexual couples in Uganda and Kenya 90% High FEM-PrEP High risk women Stopped early due interim analysis predicted no stat diff would likely to occur Low BTS 2413 IDU in Bangkok, 20% women TDF was 48.9% (95% CI, 9.672.2; P = .01 High Among women, efficacy 71% for TDF & 66% for TDF/FTC. Among men, efficacy 63% for TDF & 84% for TDF/FTC Detectable level of medication in the blood Reduction in risk of HIV infection 74% QUALITY OF EVIDENCE Adapted from summary of research at http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/prevention/research/prep/ PrEP: Pre-exposure Prophylaxis How does it work? ◦ Uninfected person takes antiretrovirals ◦ May prevent replication of virus & infection 300mg TDF/ 200mg FTC ◦ 1 tab po daily ◦ ≤90 day supply http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/pdf/guidelines/PrEPguidelines2014.pdf Should this patient receive PrEP? Case #1: 24 year old white MSM who presents 4 hours after unprotected receptive anal sex, for the first time, with his HIV-infected partner. Should this patient receive PrEP? Case #2: 24 year old MSM on nPEP, day 27/28. Struggles with consistent condom use and regularly has unprotected receptive anal intercourse with his HIV-infected partner. Specialty Drugs Specialty Drugs Fastest growing pharmaceuticals in the U.S. and Canada Spending in 2012 in US ~$87 billion (25%) ◦ 2020 estimates suggest ~$400 billion About half of spending is funded as a pharmacy benefit; the other half is funded as a medical benefit ◦ HIV drugs usually fully funded as pharmacy benefit HIV Drugs ◦ UnitedHealthcare fully insured commercial plan about 8% ◦ Medicaid health plans, account for about 18% American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/specialty-pharmacy-unique-and-growing-industry. Accessed April 27, 2016. What is a Specialty Drug? There is no regulated definition Processes around distribution and use set up to manage costs, ensure appropriate use and adherence, minimize waste, and optimize utilization Cost ◦ CMS categorizes as one with a minimum monthly cost of $600 with respect to the Medicare Part D drug benefit ◦ Other organizations utilize a higher cost threshold for specialty classification that may be as much as double that of CMS Complexity ◦ Encompass a number of factors and affect various groups, including patients, payers, manufacturers, and the pharmacy itself American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/specialty-pharmacy-unique-and-growing-industry. Accessed April 27, 2016. Factors Determining Specialty Drug Designation 0 20 40 60 80 100 Requires Patient Training to Use Limited Manufacturer Distribution Special Handling or Distribution Factors Orphan, Uncommon, Rare Disease Complex Disease/Special Monitoring High Cost Source: EMD Serono Specialty Digest, 10th Edition, p. 10. Specialty Drugs Insurance companies and manufacturers designate a drug as specialty and can restrict its availability to authorized specialty pharmacies FDA does not designate medications as specialty drugs Many specialty drugs require a PA that may be facilitated by specialty pharmacies Pharmacies should process Rx claim prior to ordering medications Many payers and manufacturers may choose to have their medication dispensed by a specialty pharmacy American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/specialty-pharmacy-unique-and-growing-industry. Accessed April 27, 2016. Specialty Pharmacy Offer comprehensive services Support to clinics and prescribers Insurance claim processing, PA, financial assistance programs, appeals, etc. Data collection/reporting for manufacturers, including adherence, distribution, etc. Completion of REMS requirements Specially trained pharmacists and technicians Benefit and billing staff IT staff American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/are-you-ready-embrace-speciality. Accessed April 27, 2016. Your colleague, David, asks you what a key characteristic of a specialty drug would be. Which of the following would be a feature of a specialty drug? A. Must be given by an intravenous infusion B. Costs on average $300 per month C. Needs close monitoring and education D. Treats acute conditions like an upper respiratory infection Specialty Pharmacy Many have extensive and robust systems: Call centers for 24/7 support Operational processes Data analysis systems Clinical protocols to manage specific diseases Educational programs Monitoring procedures Adherence management Reporting and outcome measurement systems Insurers have created own specialty pharmacy divisions American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/are-you-ready-embrace-speciality. Accessed April 27, 2016. Specialty Pharmacy Top 10 specialty pharmacies in 2014 were CVS Specialty parent company CVS Health with $20.5B in sales Express Scripts's Accredo at $15B Walgreens Boots Alliance's Walgreens Specialty at $8.5B UnitedHealth Group's OptumRx at $2.4B Diplomat Pharmacy at $2.1B Catamaran's BriovaRx at $2.0B Specialty Prime Therapeutics at $1.8B Omnicare's Advanced Care Scripts at $1.3B Humana's RightsourceRx at $1.2B Avella at $0.8B ”The Biggest in a Booming Pharmacy Field". New York Times. 15 July 2015. Accessed April 27, 2016. Specialty Pharmacy: Challenges Pharmacists in retail setting need to be aware of any specialty drugs a patient is receiving “Specialty at retail” programs ◦ Retail pharmacies that partner with specialty pharmacies to streamline patient care ◦ Pharmacists can provide ongoing, comprehensive care to the patient Not all specialty pharmacies can dispense all specialty drugs Patients must manage care between different pharmacies American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/are-you-ready-embrace-speciality. Accessed April 27, 2016. Specialty Pharmacy: Challenges Restricted access to specialty meds, from either manufacturers or payers, can prevent a retail pharmacist from being able to order or dispense a med if the pharmacy isn't in the "network.“ A retail pharmacist’s ability to dispense a specialty med will depend on the drug itself and the pharmacy Hospitals may not have access to order specialty drugs American Pharmacists Association: http://www.pharmacist.com/are-you-ready-embrace-speciality. Accessed April 27, 2016. Rebecca comes into your community pharmacy on a busy Tuesday morning. He drops off a new prescription for enfuvirtide (Fuzeon) for HIV. You don't usually dispense the med, and you don't have it in your pharmacy refrigerator. You enter the prescription and it comes back with a rejection from Rebecca's insurance stating it requires a prior authorization. There's also a note that only one fill is allowed before the med must be filled at a specialty pharmacy. It gives the name and phone number of a specialty pharmacy where the med is covered. How would you handle this situation? What would you tell Rebecca? How can you help Rebecca get started with this med? Why is the insurance requiring that Rebecca fill the drug at a specialty pharmacy? You see that the insurance is requiring Rebecca to get future refills of her Fuzeon from a specialty pharmacy. Rebecca asks you why the med can only be filled once at your pharmacy, and what a specialty pharmacy is. How would you respond? What are some of the potential benefits of a specialty pharmacy? What are some of the potential downsides of getting a med through a specialty pharmacy? Specialty Drugs: RPH’s Role Be aware: Taking a specialty medication, along with managing the disease itself, can have a significant negative impact on the patient's quality of life. Effective communication with patients improves outcomes and builds good rapport-regardless of the meds the patient is taking. Identify barriers to adherence your specific patient may have, and then work with the patient to come up with a plan. Notify prescribers early about PAs, and clearly explain the process or insurance limitations to patients Specialty Drugs: RPH’s Role Consider spreading the word to local prescribers and patients about meds stocked that other pharmacies may not, such as HIV/AIDS drugs. Order specialty meds judiciously based on patients' needs, and watch inventory closely. Advise patients to keep on top of their medication supply. Consider having a pharmacy technician or other colleague keep close tabs on ordering and inventory of specialty meds. Appropriate storage of specialty meds is key to avoid waste. Specialty Drugs: RPH’s Role Confirm that patients have any additional equipment needed to administer the med properly. Prevent and manage side effects and interactions. Keep patient profiles up-to-date. Make sure patients stay up-to-date with immunizations. Take Home Points HIV infection has now spread to every country in the world Screening for HIV infection should be performed routinely for all patients aged 13-64 yrs Laboratory tests should be performed at initial diagnosis and for ART monitoring including CD4 and viral load Receptive anal intercourse is the #1 mode of HIV transmission in the United States All HIV infected patients may benefit from the initiation of ART regardless of the CD4 count Take Home Points Use at LEAST two different classes of antiretrovirals EFV should be avoided in pregnant women during 1st trimester due to teratogenic effects Most adolescents acquired HIV though sexual risk behaviors Youth have lower rates of viral suppression, higher rates of virologic rebound and loss to follow-up Take Home Points EFV should be avoided in pregnant women during 1st trimester due to teratogenic effects Women who have not received ART during pregnancy should receive ZDV during labor and the baby should receive All cases of prenatal ARV exposure should be reported in the ARV pregnancy registry (www.apregistry.com) Take Home Points Older patients generally have a shorter time to virological suppression but have a blunted immune response taking longer to achieve an appropriate CD4 response Polypharmacy and co-morbidities play a large role in management of HIV in older patients Renal function must be monitored closely in older patients with HIV Prevention interventions are a key part of HIV care Take Home Points Interventions in clinic settings are effective in changing sexual risk behavior ART may reduce risk of HIV transmission 300mg TDF/ 200mg FTC daily recommended for preexposure prophylaxis, adherence is key Specialty drugs are the fastest growing pharmaceuticals in the U.S. and Canada Take Home Points 2 main factors affect a drug’s designation as specialty: cost and complexity Insurance companies and manufacturers designate a drug as specialty and can restrict its availability to authorized specialty pharmacies Specialty pharmacies offer comprehensive services to help create a high level of “care coordination and patient support” to help ensure adherence to therapy and reduce overall costs related to this medication Websites to Access the Guidelines http://www.aidsetc.org http://aidsinfo.nih.gov Questions Pamela M. Moye, Pharm.D., BCPS, AAHIVP [email protected] Visit GPhAconvention.com/grow to download materials from this and other presentations.