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HIV/AIDS Edsel Salvaña, MD, DTM&H Associate Professor Infectious Diseases Section Department of Medicine, UP-PGH Research Faculty National Institutes of Health Learning Objectives To learn about HIV pathogenesis To learn about the impact of antiretroviral therapy on the epidemiology and prognosis of persons living with HIV/AIDS To discuss the preventive measures and prospects for a vaccine and cure HIV Human Immunodeficiency Virus Causative agent of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome RNA virus – retrovirus, uses reverse transcriptase enzyme Natural history Acute HIV infection is characterized by a flu-like illness with lymphadenopathy, fever and malaise Self-limited and patient usually recovers Takes 8 to 10 years to develop AIDS AIDS Defined either by laboratory parameters in an asymptomatic patient, or by an AIDS-defining illness, usually an opportunistic infection CD4 < 200 is AIDS Opportunistic infections: PCP, MAC, cryptococcus meningitis, Kaposi’s sarcoma, CNS lymphoma, esophageal thrush etc. = AIDS at ANY CD4 count Johnston and Fauci. NEJM 359 (9): 888, Figure 1 Origin of HIV traced to a simian virus, SIVcpz from chimpanzees likely bloodborne transmission to human hunters Phylogenetic analysis points to at least three different independent transmission events in the 20th century major (M, between 1915 and 1941), outlier (O), and nonmajor and nonoutlier (N) earliest documented case of HIV-1 infection (with group M strain) blood sample from 1959 in Kinshasa, Zaire Some evidence that O may be from gorillas Selective Timeline of HIV/AIDS 1981 – 1st cases of PCP, KS reported 1983 – Retrovirus isolated and identified 1985 – Blood supply testing began (EIA) 1987 – Azidothymidine (ZDV) approved 1987-1995 – Dual-NRTI regimens 1992 – PCP Prophylaxis: better outcomes1 1995 – CCR5 identified as 1° receptor 1996 –HAART era began: Introduction of PIs 1Chaisson RE et al. Arch Intern Med. 1992 Oct; 152(10):2009-13. http://hiv.buffalo.edu/images/hiv_virus_in_action.jpg CD4 + cell Mostly T-helper cells, also found in some histiocytes including Langhans cells and reticuloendothelial cells which serve as reservoir sites CD4+ T-cell is the lynchpin of cellularmediated immune system CCR5 and CXCR4 Primary receptor of HIV found to be CCR5, and not CD4 Δ32 mutation confer high level protection against infection with CCR5 virus CCR5 and CXCR4 are chemokine receptors, R4 is essential to life Emergence of R4 viruses might be a late phenomonon in disease How does HIV cause AIDS? Early infection depletes most gut associated CD4 cells During the latent phase, viremia is at a low level, but there is evidence that ongoing viral replication causes unregulated immune stimulation Constant immune stimulation eventually leads to immune dysregulation and destruction of CD4 cells In early HIV Infection, gut CD4 T cells are profoundly depleted Brenchley et al Nat Immunol ‘06 Plasma LPS levels are increased in chronic HIV infection Brenchley et al, Nat Med 06 %CD38+ CD4 T cells Levels of circulating microbial products correlate with indices of immune activation Plasma 16s DNA (copies/ul) Brenchley et al Nat Med ‘06 Jiang et al J Inf Dis ‘09 How do these microbial products drive immune activation? (that’s their job!) Kanzler et al Nat Med ‘07 Immune Deficiency HIV replication Immune Activation Microbial Translocation Gut Mucosal damage Natural History of HIV Disease 1200 Acute HIV syndrome wide dissemination of virus seeding of lymphoid organs Death Opportunistic diseases Clinical latency 800 1/512 1/256 1/128 Constitutional symptoms 600 1/64 1/32 400 1/16 1/8 200 1/4 0 1/2 0 0 3 6 9 12 Weeks 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Years 8 9 Plasma Viremia (Dilutional Titer) CD4+ T-cells, cells/L 1000 Primary infection 10 11+ From Fauci AS, Pantaleo G, Stanley S, Weissman D. Immunopathogenic mechanisms of HIV infection. Ann Intern Med. 1996 Apr 1;124(7):654-63. Diagnosis HIV ELISA detects HIV antibody – screening test, highly sensitive (>99%), can sometimes have false positive Western Blot is confirmatory test Window period of 3 to 6 weeks from acute infection to development of antibodies HIV PCR can detect virus around 5 days from infection HIV Testing Must be with full consent Confidential Can opt to use an alias If result is negative, can report to patient, if positive, WAIT FOR CONFIRMATORY TEST Never assume that patient’s companions know his/her status Transmission Blood-borne Sexual transmission Vertical transmission Theoretical risk with saliva to open wound, or human bite but no documented cases, one case of infection from deep kissing No risk from urine, feces, sweat or tears Epidemiology 33.4 million people worldwide are currently infected with HIV 28 million deaths so far 2.7 million new cases in 2008 2 million deaths reported number of new cases has declined by 17% since 2001 number of deaths has decreased by 10% since 2001 Philippine HIV/AIDS situation Traditionally low prevalence area Only 4,567 confirmed case since 1984 Estimated to have around 12,000 cases in 2005 (UNAIDS) THE LANCET Infectious Diseases Vol 3 June 2003 http://infection.thelancet.com HIV and AIDS Cases, 1984 - 2009 (Source: AIDS Registry, NEC) Transmission Blood-borne Sexual transmission Vertical transmission Theoretical risk with saliva to open wound, or human bite but no documented cases, one case of infection from deep kissing No risk from urine, feces, sweat or tears Modes of Transmission (Source: AIDS Registry, NEC 84-08) Nedlestick injury <1% IDU No data 9% <1% Perinatal 1% Blood/Blood Products 1% National AIDS/STI Prevention and Control Program Infectious Disease Office Sexual Contact 89% New Cases From 20012008 17 % WORLD 334% PHILIPPINES Treatment Consists of combination anti-virals Uses at least two classes of drugs and at least three active drugs ARV – antiretrovirals HAART – Highly Active Antiretroviral treatment Rationale is to prevent resistance mutations From death sentence to chronic disease After an unprecedented global effort in research and aid, effective medication was discovered Turning point came with discovery of protease inhibitors, and use of HAART The Fundamental Questions Why treat? When to start HAART? What are the best drugs to use? How to follow a patient on HAART? When to switch regimens? NOTE: IF YOU DON’T DO THIS FOR A LIVING, REFER TO SOMEONE WHO DOES – OUTCOMES ARE BETTER HAART Improves Outcomes1 1Palella FJ et al. N Engl J Med 1998 March; 338:853-60. Predictors of Virological Success Potency of ARV regimen Adherence Lower baseline viremia Higher baseline CD4 cell counts Rapid reduction of viremia in response to treatment FDA-Approved Antiretrovirals Class Generic name Symbo l Brand name Class Generic name Symbol Brand name Zidovudine ZDV, AZT Retrovir® Saquinavir SQV Invirase®/Fortovase® Lamivudine 3TC Epivir® Ritonavir RTV Norvir® Stavudine d4T Zerit® Indinavir IDV Crixivan® Zalcitabine ddC Hivid® Nelfinavir NFV Viracept® Didanosine ddI Videx® Lopinavir LPV/r Kaletra® Abacavir ABC Ziagen® Fosamprenavir fAPV/FPV Lexiva® Tenofovir TDF Viread® Atazanavir ATV Reyataz® Emtricitabine FTC Emtriva® Tipranavir TPV Aptivus® Delavirdine DLV Rescriptor® Darunavir TMC114 Prezista ® Nevirapine NVP Viramune® FI Enfuvirtide ENF, T-20 Fuzeon® Efavirenz EFV Sustiva® EI Maraviroc MVC Celsentri® Etravirine ETR Intelence® InI Raltegravir RGV Isentress® NRTI NNRTI PI Selecting a Regimen Potency Tolerability Drug-drug interactions Co-morbidities Lifestyle (dosing convenience, etc) Adherence Pre-treatment CD4 cell count Gender Other Concepts Resistance Mutations Altered drug susceptibilities Viral Fitness and Replicative Capacity M184V/I “Boosting” Ritonavir (atazanavir, delavirdine) Pharmacologic manipulation Increase dosing intervals, reduce dose threshold for developing drug resistance OI prophylaxis PCP (CD4<200) – Cotrimoxazole Toxoplasma (CD4<100) – Cotrimoxazole MAC (CD4<50) – Azithromycin Other OI’s: CNS lymphoma, KS, Giardia, Cryptococcus, CMV, PML, Cryptosporidium, Thrush, Bacterial Pneumonia x 3, Cervical Cancer Prevention Use prophylactics Monogamy Circumcision Do not recap needles Post-exposure Prophylaxis Blood screening ?Microbicides ?Vaccines Risk from occupational exposure to patient with known disease HIV 0.3% HBV: HbSAg+ HbEAg+ 22-31% HbSAg+ HbEAg- 1-6% HCV 1.8% Factors that affect transmission Type of exposure Amount of blood or body fluid transferred Size of needle, hollow bore Patient on antiretrovirals Current viral load Precautions Assume all patients are potentially infected Universal precautions: glove (can double-glove for known positives), gown, face mask and eye protection Never recap needles, uses needleless systems when possible Dispose of sharps properly When to give prophylaxis? Risk stratify patient: known history of HIV, recent testing, occupation, sexual history, high risk exposures Risk stratify injury: large hollow bore needles, bleeding profusely etc. If low risk, no need for prophylaxis If high risk, need to start prophylaxis within 72 hours of injury, otherwise no benefit Microbicides Topically applied prior to sexual intercourse Mechanically or chemically blocks entry of the virus into target cells Resuts disappointing so far Vaccines Traditional approaches to producing broadly neutralizing antibody have failed T-cell vaccines underwent trials, failed with evidence of possible harm Selected Obstacles to HIV-Vaccine Development and Their Implications. The window of opportunity for the immune system to clear the initial infection is narrow, since HIV integrates and establishes latent infection within days or weeks. Destruction of CD4+ T cells begins early after infection. Enormous genetic diversity and mutations that occur with replication enable HIV to avoid immune surveillance. Conserved antibody targets on the outer envelope protein are "hidden" from immune recognition. Johnston MI, Fauci AS. An HIV Vaccine — Challenges and Prospects. NEJM 2008;359:888-890 Implications Rational, empirical approaches to vaccine development have not been successful to date. Fundamental questions regarding HIV disease and the host response to the virus need to be answered. Fresh new ideas beyond the scope of classic vaccinology are urgently needed. Johnston MI, Fauci AS. An HIV Vaccine — Challenges and Prospects. NEJM 2008;359:888-890 THANK YOU!