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Prophylaxis for Blood (Occupational) and Sexual HIV Exposures Allen McCutchan, M.D., M.Sc. Revised from material supplied by Jennifer Blanchard, M.D. Exposure Risk - What’s an exposure? Violation of skin barrier by HIV containing fluids from – Penetrating injuries (needle sticks) – Mucous Membrane contact – Contact with – chapped, abraded, or inflamed skin or with an open wound Rarely, if ever, from sharing personal grooming tools like toothbrushes or razors Not from contact with intact skin because HIV does not penetrate healthy skin Exposure Risk - Exposed to what? What fluids ? – Blood – Body fluids Semen (fluids from several glands) Vaginal secretions (vaginal fluid, cervical mucus, and menstrual blood) Rarely Others( not Saliva, tears, sweat, or nonbloody feces or urine) unless bloody What viruses– HIV and Hepatitis B and C Risk Factors for Transmission: Exposure to more HIV (or Hep B or C) Exposure to larger quantity of blood Needle placed directly in artery or vein Deep injury Hollow-bore needle Device visibly contaminated with patients blood Patients with higher viral load Acutely infected (primary HIV infection) Terminally ill Exposure Risk: Patient Factors Known HIV+ – Viral load – On therapy Unknown HIV status – History of risk factors – Symptoms c/w primary HIV – History of HIV testing Unknown patient (ie. sharps box stick) – Prevalence where exposure occurred – How long sharp exposed Exposure Risk Not all needlesticks are the same Average risk for needlestick is 0.3% (1 HIV infection / 300 needle sticks) Average risk for mucous membrane exposure is 0.09% (1 HIV infection / 9000) As of 6/00, CDC had received 56 reports of HCW’s with seroconversion (this is likely a serious underestimate) Exposure Risk Not all needlesticks are the same Risk factor Deep injury Adjusted odds ratio* 16.1 Visible blood on device 5.2 Procedure involving needle in artery or vein 5.1 Terminal illness in source patient 6.4 Postexposure use of ZDV 0.2 *All were significant at p<0.01 PEP or no PEP Most exposures do not result in transmission of HIV Consider – risk of exposure and – Infectivity of the source patient Consider health of HCW If Source’s Serostatus is Unknown PEP until lab results obtained and then modify or discontinue Get consent for testing from source patient Test source patient and assess risk factors for window period (HIV without HIV antibody) Legal Issues in Testing Unknown Patients Source patient’s consent is not required to tell HCW of known HIV status Source pts MD must make “good faith” effort to obtain consent to test for HIV Testing may proceed without pts consent and results given to exposed HCW Patient must be informed of this and may elect not to receive results. HCW must maintain confidentiality Primary Prevention Don’t get stuck – Never recap – Sedate the patient if necessary and possible – Wear gloves Don’t get splashed – Wear glasses or goggles The Rationale for Postexposure Prophylaxis Systemic infection does not occur immediately, leaving theoretical “window of opportunity” to modify viral replication Animal data on PEP – ARV may block dissemination from dendritic cells to susceptible T cells – ARV may prevent intravenous infection of T cells Human data on PEP is limited but supportive Primary HIV infection – Rhesus Monkeys & SIV Rhesus monkeys exposed intravaginally with SIV At 24 hours, SIV detected in vaginal dendritic cells These cells fuse with CD4 lymphocytes and then migrate to regional lymph nodes By 48 hours, SIV detected in inguinal LNs Lymphatic spread of virus and infected cells to the spleen and other lymphoid tissues By 5 days, SIV detected in the blood Primary HIV Infection Human Data Viral dynamics in acute HIV infection in humans were similar to the SIV model Time from mucosal infection to initial viremia varies from 4-11 days After infection, there is a rapid rise in plasma viremia, with widespread dissemination of the virus ass’d with seeding of lymphoid organs Primary HIV Infection Human Data Viral doubling time in acute HIV ~ 12 hours Peak HIV RNA levels were detected 12-29 days post exposure (mean 21 days) Rise in viral load exceeds 1 million RNA molecules/mL Drop in viral load ass’d with appearance of cytotoxic T lymphocytes Viral set point is then established Animal PEP Mice and AZT SCID mice inoculated IV with HIV AZT PEP initiated 0.5, 1,2,4,8,24,36, & 48h later All mice treated at 0.5, 1, & 2 h were protected 80% treated at 8h protected 40% treated at 24 h protected No protection of treatment started at 48h. Shih CC et al. JID 1991 Animal PEP Tenofovir and Macaques IV SIV inoculation to long-tailed macaques Tenofovir given – 48 hours before – 4 & 24 hours after – For 28 days No treated animals infected; all controls infected Tsai CC et al. Science,1995;270: 1197-1199 Animal PEP Tenofovir and Macaques Macaques infected IV with SIV 3,10 or 28d PEP with tenofovir initiated at 24, 48, & 72 hours after inoculation. All controls infected All animals treated at 24h for 28d protected 50% showed persistent viremia in other treatment groups. Tsai CC et al. J Virology 1998;72:4265-73. Summary of Animal PEP Prophylactic Efficacy Decreased with large viral inocula Decreased with delay – Best results within 24 hours Decreased with shortened duration – 4 weeks ass’d with highest protection – 3 & 10 days not protective for macaques exposed to SIV Decreased with lower dose PEP Increased with normal host immune system Human PEP - Efficacy No prospective studies Retrospective case-control studies, risk of HIV infection was reduced by 80% in those who took AZT as PEP ACTG 076 – maternal-fetal transmission decreased by 67% Numerous studies of decreased perinatal transmission with ARVs Case reports Indications for PEP for Injuries PEP Indicated High risk exposure Known + patient AIDS/high viral load No delay to rx PEP not indicated Low risk exposure Low risk pt Found needle Delay > 72 hours Drug interactions/ coexisting medical problems Human PEP for Blod Transfusions 13 y/o girl transfused 1 unit of packed red cells from donor in the “window period” Infection risk estimated to be 100% 3-drug PEP initiated at 50 h posttransfusion, continued for 9 mo No evidence of HIV infection 15 mo later – Ann Int Med 2000;133:31-4 Limitations of the Data Very difficult to study human primary infection Extrapolating animal data to humans Maternal-fetal transmission is not the same as occupational exposures PEP Drugs 2 or 3 drugs based on risk of exposure/pt – AZT/3TC – AZT/3TC + Lopinavir/ritonavir + 1 dose nevirapine – Modify based on source pt/drug resistance Important goal is completing 4 week regimen – 50% stop b/c source pt HIV– 50% stop d/t side effects PEP Drugs – Side Effects N/V/D, hepatitis Nephrolithiasis Anemia, Neutropenia Headache, Rash Pancreatitis Hyperglycemia Hyperbilirubinemia Hypersensitivity reactions Other… PEP Drugs – Side effects Is it worth it? – 50% of HCW have side effects – No long term data on carcinogenesis 1/3 of HCW’s discontinue PEP d/t side effects Most side effects reversible or modifiable – Anti-emetics, anti-diarrheals – Epogen Nevirapine: Serious Adverse Events MMWR 1/5/01 report of 22 cases of severe toxicity in people taking NVP for PEP from 3/97 through 9/00 Clinical syndromes reported: – 12 cases of hepatoxicity (2 fulminant hepatitis, 1 required liver transplant) – 14 cases of skin reactions (1 Stevens-Johnson) – 1 case of rhabdomyolysis Not recommended for long term use unless exposure high risk, high risk of MDR virus, HCW with no liver hx and EFV contraindicated Pregnant HCW Pregnancy should not preclude the use of postexposure prophylaxis Less data on safety of PI’s in first trimester Sustiva contraindicated Avoid IDV near term d/t hyperbilirubinemia in newborns D4T/ddI contratindicated d/t mitochondrial toxicity in newborns Drugs usually started after 14 weeks gestation in chronically infected pts if not already on ARVs Drug Resistant Virus Very little data Combination regimens recommended based on data for chronically infected individuals Resistance testing not helpful Use agents that the source has not been exposed to PEP Failures 21 cases reported 16 AZT monotherapy 2 AZT/ddI 3 with > drugs (AZT/3TC/IDV; AZT/3TC/ddI/IDV) 13/21 source pts previously treated with ARVs 4/7 resistance assays showed decreased sensitivity to PEP meds used HIV Infection in HCW’s 81% experienced syndrome c/w primary HIV infection at median of 25d Median time to seroconversion 46d Factors implicated in failure – Viral resistance – Large inoculum – Delayed or shortened PEP Management of Occupational Exposure to HIV Wash wound with soap and water; flush mucous membranes with water, saline or sterile wash Initiate PEP immediately (can be modified later) – Pregnancy test HIV Ab testing at baseline, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 6 months & 1 year HIV PCR RNA ? (not recommended by CDC) – High false + rate (2-5%) – Only if symptomatic CBC, Chem 10,liver panel baseline and 2 weeks Counseling and education Counseling: Weeks 1-12 after exposure Abstain from sex or use condoms Do not donate blood, semen, organs Consider stop breast-feeding Seek medical care for any acute illness that occurs during the follow up period – Acute HIV infection – Drug reaction – Other Acute Retroviral Syndrome Symptoms start within a few to many weeks after exposure, but could also represent drug reactions May last few days to more than 10 weeks; average < 14 days Severe or prolonged symptoms correlate with more rapid disease progression Signs and Symptoms Fever Fatigue Rash Headache Lymphadenopathy Pharyngitis Myalgias, arthralgias >80-90% >70-90% >40-80% 32-70% 40-70% 50-70% 50-70% Signs and Symptoms – Acute HIV Infection N/V/D Night sweats Aseptic meningitis Oral/genital ulcers Thrombocytopenia Leukopenia Elevated LFTs 30-60% 50% 24% 5-20% 45% 40% 21% Signs and Symptoms – Acute HIV Infection Thrush Weight loss Depression Retro-orbital pain Rash – maculopapular, involves the trunk What to do if you are exposed Wash wound with soap and water Flush mucous membranes with saline/water Determine status of source patient Test source patient Take the meds as soon as possible – Normal working hours - Pam Scott in occupational health - pager 1447 – After hours - ED