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Neuropsychiatric Manifestations of HIV Thomas Newton, MD UCLA/Pacific AIDS Education and Training Center [email protected] AIDS Education & Training Centers’ National Resources Warmline: (800) 933 - 3413 PEPline: (888) 448 – 4911 (888) HIV - 4911 Perinatal Hotline: (888) 448 - 8765 www.aids-etc.org Neuropsychiatric Manifestations of HIV: Educational Objectives At the end of presentation, participants will be able to: • Identify risk factors for impairment • Discuss treatment options • Identify potential drug interactions Neuropsychiatric Manifestations of HIV Biologic Psychologic Social KEY POINTS 1. HIV has global impact 2. Effects can be understood on variety of dimensions 3. Biologic effects related to host/virus interaction 4. Psychologic effects related to neuropsychiatric impacts and preexisting vulnerabilities 5. Social effects vary by time and place Biologic Complications depend on severity of immunosuppression Differential diagnosis changes Early, middle and late stages of illness Early definition: Above 400-500 CD4+, asymptomatic Non HIV-related psychiatric syndromes more likely Be wary of off, early presentations of HIV-related syndromes KEY POINTS 1. High CD4 usually found early in infection, but… 2. Rate of progression extremely variable Case of Multidrug-Resistant HIV and Rapid Progression to AIDS in New York City Background On February 11th 2005, New York City health officials reported that a local gay man in his mid-40s had recently been infected with multidrug-resistant HIV and progressed rapidly to AIDS. He also has a history of unprotected sex while using methamphetamine. The man was first diagnosed with HIV between four and twenty months before steep drop in CD4 cells and a high viral load. Middle definition: Roughly between 200 and 500 CD4+ Mild symptoms Before AIDS-defining O.I. (symptoms more important) KEY POINTS 1. Lower CD4 levels generally found later in the disease, but… HIV-1 Evolution and Chemokine Receptor Genotypes-Implication for AIDS Progression Genetic polymorphysms of chemokine receptor genes (CCR5, CCR2, CXCR4) are closely associated with AIDS. These chemokine receptors are coreceptors with CD4 for HIV-1, mutations in which confer protection against HIV-1 infection and/or slow progression of the disease. The absence of CCR5 in ~1% of Caucasians very strongly protects against HIV-1 transmission. It is estimated that 25-30% of patients who remain AIDS-free for >16 years attribute their survival to mutations in these receptors. The protective mutation (delta32CCR5) is not present in Africans or Asians who bear the burden of most of the world's HIV infection. Late definition: Below 200 CD4+ After AIDS-defining O.I. Very late: below 50 CD4+ (symptoms predict symptoms) KEY POINTS 1. What about patients who once had CD4 < 200, but now … 2. …have CD4 > 500 3. …continue with CD4 < 200, but virally suppressed? Neuropsychiatric complications Minimal early course of illness Develop after other symptoms, usually By death, probably more than 50% prevalence (really unknown) KEY POINTS 1. …Early in illness, psychological symptoms are psychological until proven otherwise 2. …Late in illness, psychological symptoms are due to HIV until proven otherwise KEY POINTS 1. …Difficult to determine if any symptom is due to HIV or other process 2. …Diagnosis and treatment guided by risk factors and probabilities Neuropsyiatric complications cont. “Personality change” frequent, with increased lability Memory, praxis, “cortical” abilities spared A subcortical dementia, more like Parkinson’s than Alzheimer’s Infrequent psychosis or mania (poorly defined) KEY POINTS 1. What about patients who once had CD4 < 200, but now … …have CD4 > 500 …continue with CD4 < 200, but virally suppressed Patient with CD4 > 500, but continued cognitive impairment Patient with CD4 < 200, but normal with methylphenidate (dependent on methamphetamine 15 years ago, now low risk for relapse) Clinical Manifestations of HIVrelated dementia Cognitive impairments --Short-term memory deficit; “forgetfulness” rather than amnesia --Decreased concentration and attention --Confusion and disorientation --Overall intellectual ability generally well preserved until late Visuospatial perception deficits Changes in personality or behavior --Apathy, decreased interest --Impaired judgment, erratic behavior --Social withdrawal --Rigidity of thought --Speech impairment: slow, dysarthria, hyphonia; difficulty in following other speakers KEY POINTS 1. …Mini Mental State not helpful; detects delirium or “cortical” impairments 2. …Best screen is history + assessment of psychomotor speed Early Entry Confirmed by intrathecal antibody synthesis Virus often retrieved from CSF Probably ubiquitous Indirect pathogenesis Infection of non-neuronal cells important Infection activates CNS macrophages Activated macrophages produce toxic products Viral products may be neurotoxic KEY POINTS 1. 2. 3. 4. …Other viruses infect neurons …Herpes, rabies …These produce irreversible deficits …HIV produces combination of reversible and irreversible deficits HIV and Brain Fig. 1. Cortical thinning on the lateral brain surface in HIV/AIDS. (a) Average profile of cortical thickness in AIDS patients. Right hemisphere is on the left. (b) Mean cortical thickness for matched healthy controls. (c) Average percentage thinning of the cortex in AIDS relative to healthy controls. (d) Color-coded map that shows the significance of the group difference, at each cortical point (reds indicate significant cortical thinning). The band of thinner cortex encompasses the primary sensorimotor, premotor, and parietal cortices. Thompson PM, Dutton RA, Hayashi KM, et al (2005): Thinning of the cerebral cortex visualized in HIV/AIDS reflects CD4+ T lymphocyte decline. PNAS 102:15647-52. KEY POINTS 1. …Affects mood as well as cognition 2. …Unknown if pre-existing mood disorder risk factor 3. …Unknown roll of alcohol, cocaine, methamphetamine Neuropsychiatric manifestations of HIV dimensions: Biologic Psychologic Social Depression diagnosis: Differential diagnosis of “DUO” Adjustment response “Organic”---secondary to HIV-related disease Medication complication (antiretroviral) Psychiatric disorder Psychologic background: Illness occurs in context of numerous losses Friends and loved may also be ill Psychologic depression: May be more common in gay men regardless of HIV Lifetime prevalence* in gay man of Major depression: 33% vs 3% Substance abuse: 45% vs 15% (ECA estimates for straight men) * Williams et al. Arch Gen. Psychiatry, 1991 Depression diagnosis: Important considerations: Onset and course Symptoms and severity Previous episodes and treatment response (remember, treatment is easy, diagnosis is hard) Depression After correct diagnosis: Controlled trials suggest standard antidepressants have usual efficacy Anecdotal evidence for “replacement” therapies (testosterone) Psychotherapy helpful for dealing with loss, etc. Stimulants useful in advanced illness Psychologic anxiety: Situational anxiety expected, responds to benzodiazepines Sleep disturbance expected, responds to standard treatment Cognitive/behavioral treatments helpful when anxiety is reality based Stressful Life Events and HIV Coping in Health and Illness Project (CHIP at UNC) 9 year longitudinal study Life events and difficulties Interviewer based Severity, duration, and context important Excludes events due to HIV Leserman et al., CNS Spectrums 8:25-30 2003 CHIPS At baseline, severe life events in previous 6 months: Low NK cells (CD16+ and CD56+) Fewer CD8+ CHIPS For each severe stressor: – Risk of AIDS-defining condition tripled – For those above median in stress: • AIDS progression rate was 74%, • compared to 40% for those below median in stress Leserman et al., Psychol Med 32:1059-1073 (2002) KEY POINTS 1. Stressor depends on individual 2. Best assessed using personal impact, duration of impact, and change needed to accommodate 3. Lists of stressors (Holmes and Rahe) fair but can be missleading CHIPS Limitations: – Small sample (99) – Geographically limited (N.C.) – Lack of control for duration of HIV infection – Completed prior to HAART CHIPS Convergence of • AIDS diagnosis • HIV stage progression • Cellular indices of progression Suggest validity KEY POINTS Unknown: Would treatment alter impact of stressor? Who’s at greatest risk? What factors are protective? UCLA Study • Bereavement associated with more rapid decline in CD4 cells • Not accounted for by differences in health habits, drug use, age • Finding meaning in bereavement mitigated against decline Bower et al., J Consult Clin Psychol 66:979-986 (1998) KEY POINTS “Stress” can be toxic or beneficial Mechanism unknown What aspects of immune function impacted not always clear Pharmacokinetic Mechanisms of Drug Interactions Altered drug absorption Inhibition of metabolism Induction of metabolism First Pass Metabolism Systemic Circulation Oral Medication Hepatic Artery Hepatic Vein Intestine Portal Vein -P450 Directly metabolized here before reaching systemic circulation -P450 Enzymes present in intestinal cells -PGP Altered Drug Absorption: Food Requirements Didanosine (ddI, Videx) Tenofovir (TDF, Viread) Efavirenz (EFV, Sustiva) Kaletra (lopinavir/ritonavir) Amprenavir (Agenerase) Indinavir (Crixivan) Saquinavir (Fortovase) Nelfinavir (Viracept) empty stomach w/ food empty stomach w/ food avoid high fat light snack w/ food w/ food Pharmacodynamic Mechanisms of Drug Interactions Synergism Antagonism D4T and AZT IDV and SQV Can effect drug activity or toxicity Ritonavir + saquinavir in liver enzymes or cholesterol AZT + ganciclovir enhanced bone marrow suppression d4T + ddI worsened neuropathy Beneficial Drug Interactions • Improve bioavailability – • drug dose; pill burden; eliminate food requirements CL – less frequent administration • Concentration of active metabolites • Displace highly protein bound drugs – active drug • Improve drug exposure – overcome resistant virus KEY POINTS 1. Drug interactions common 2. May be beneficial or dangerous 3. Identification of the existence of an interaction not always helpful Cytochrome P450 Enzyme Classes A A B C D E F A IA1 IIA3 IIB6 IIC8 IID6 IIE1 IIF1 IIIA3 IA2 IV III II I IIB7 IIC9 IID7 IIIA4 IIB8 IIC10 IID8 IIIA5 A B IVB1 KEY POINTS 1. Many CYP exist 2. Only three relevant to human drug metabolism 3. 2D6 and 3A4 most important P450 Substrates >50% of all metabolized drugs are substrates for the CYP450 3A4 enzyme Major player in the metabolism of most HIV antiretrovirals Not the only available pathway of metabolism (I.e. NFV and RTV 2D6, 2C9) Contributes to the complexity of HIV polypharmacy P450 Inhibitors • Any drug that inhibits the metabolism of a P450 substrate • Results in levels of coadministered drug • Competitive and reversible • All PI’s are 3A4 inhibitors • RTV and SQV are 2D6 inhibitors Model of CYP50 Inhibition Drug Concentration Inhibitor added Time P450 CYP3A4 Degree of inhibition of liver CL ritonavir NFV, IDV, LOP/r EFV, DLV SQV, AMP + 0 RED FLAG List - P450 3A4 Inhibitors These Agents will Concentrations of Co-Administered Drug DRUG CLASS HIV Protease Inhibitors Macrolides RANK LIKLIHOOD of Drug Interaction ALTERNATIVES / Comments Ritonavir> Indinavir= lopinavir> nelfinavir>amprenavir> saquinavir Saquinavir has less potential to cause interactions Erythromycin > Clarithromycin Azithromycin – not metabolized by P450 Antifungals Ketoconazole> Itraconazole> Fluconazole HIV NNRTI’s Delavirdine Efavirenz (mixed) H2 Antagonists SSRIs Cimetidine (high propensity) Fluconazole assoc w/ less drug i/a with doses <200mg. dose potential Delavirdine may be used to conc of other drugs Any other H2 Antagonist (ranitidine, nizatidine,etc) Led to serotonin syndrome; mirtazapine, venlafixine have least P450 Grapefruit juice Daily intake Fluoxetine P450 3A4 Substrates Macrolide antibiotics: clarithromycin erythromycin (not 3A5) NOT azithromycin Anti-arrhythmics: quinidine=>3-OH (not 3A5) Benzodiazepines: alprazolam diazepam=>3OH midazolam triazolam Immune Modulators: cyclosporine HIV Antivirals: indinavir nelfinavir ritonavir saquinavir Calcium Channel Blockers: HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors: NOT pravastatin simvastatin RED FLAG List - P450 2D6 Inhibitors These Agents will Concentrations of Co-Administered Drug DRUG CLASS HIV Protease Inhibitors Macrolides RANK LIKLIHOOD of Drug Interaction ALTERNATIVES / Comments Ritonavir Antifungals HIV NNRTI’s H2 Antagonists Fluoxetine, paroxetine SSRIs Grapefruit juice N/A Citalopram, venlafaxine, etc P450 2D6 Substrates Beta Blockers: carvedilol S-metoprolol propafenone timolol Antidepressants: amitriptyline clomipramine desipramine imipramine paroxetine Antipsychotics: haloperidol perphenazine risperidone=>9OH thioridazine Other: alprenolol amphetamine bufuralol chlorpheniramine chlorpromazine codeine (=>O-desMe) encainide flecainide P450 Inducers Increases the production of P450 enzyme More enzymes more rapid CL of drugs that are substrates exposure to coadministered drugs blood levels Occurs after 7-10 days & effects persist for several days Can turn on multiple genes at once (I.e 3A4, 2D6, conjugation, etc) Model of CYP450 induction Drug Concentration Inducer added Time P450 CYP3A4 Degree of Liver Enzyme Induction rifampin, phenobarbital RTV*, NFV*, LOP/r*, AMP EFV*, NVP, phenytoin + * mixed effects on enzymes- not exclusively metabolized by 3A4 0 RED FLAG List - P450 Inducers These Agents will Concentrations of Co-Administered Drug DRUG CLASS Rifamycins: Rifampin, Rifabutin HIV Protease Inhibitors HIV NNRTI’s Anticonvulsants St. Johns Wort RANK LIKLIHOOD of INTERACTION Both are POTENT Inducers; use rifabutin over rifampin for TB if pt on a PI Ritonavir = Nelfinavir ALTERNATIVE / COMMENTS Avoid rifampin while on PI’s; Use ½ Rifabutin dose w/ IDV, APV, NFV; Use ½ dose qMWF with RTV; EFV ok (rifabutin 450mg ) All other PI’s Efavirenz = Nevirapine Phenobarbital > Phenytoin = Carbamazepine If clinically indicated: Valproic Acid, Gabapentin, Lamotrigene, Topiramate; Bidirectional; documented virologic failure when combined with PI’s RED FLAG List - Metabolized Drugs with Narrow Therapeutic Indices Use EXTREME Caution with P450 inhibitors/inducers as serious side effects may occur if their concentrations are altered CATEGORY Antiarrythmics Opiate Analgesics Benzo’s Ergotamines Ergot Derivs Anticoagualants OC’s DRUGS Flecainide, Quinidine Fentanyl (duragesic) Midazolam, Triazolam, alprazolam Cafergot, Hydergine, DHE Warfarin Ethinyl Estradiol; norethindrone ALTERNATIVES / COMMETNS Monitor closely with P450 inhibitors Hydromorphone, codeine, NSAIDS (esp in pts on RTV) Oversedation; use temazepam; lorazepam Monitor INR when initiating or changing therapy Efficacy 45%;Use alternative methods when pts receive P450 inducing PI’s RED FLAG Lists: http://medicine.iupui.edu/flockhart/