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Care and Management of the HIV+ Youth Ronald Wilcox MD FAAP DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Care and Management of the HIV+ Youth Ronald Wilcox MD FAAP AKA Man with Many Hats DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org What is your profession? 1. Student / Resident / Fellow 2. Primary Care Provider in Practice 3. Specialty Provider in Practice 4. Nursing 5. Public Health 6. Pharmacist 7. Other 42% 32% 11% 5% 5% 0% 1 2 3 5% 0% 4 5 6 7 8 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org HIV in Youth 1. Is very rare 2. Occurs only in MSM 3. Is found proportionately to racial make-up of US 4. Is a growing epidemic 80% 15% 0% 1 5% 2 3 4 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org What is your level of experience of dealing with HIV+ adolescents? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Non-existent Minimal Moderate High Expert Don’t believe there is any HIV in teens 42% 32% 11% 5% 5% 0% 1 2 3 5% 0% 4 5 6 7 8 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Case 1 • An 18 year old boy recently aged out of foster care. • He received transitional services and had a job in a fast food restaurant when he left his foster home. • He quickly lost that job and is now homeless. • He’s living on the streets and makes money panhandling. • He also sometimes sells sex to other men but tells you he’s not sexually attracted to men and just needs money. • You do an HIV antibody test and it’s negative. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Which of the following groups is the largest in terms of adolescents 13-24 years of age diagnosed with HIV infection: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. White males White females African-American males African-American females Hispanic males Hispanic females 17% 17% 17% 17% 17% 1 2 17% 3 4 5 6 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org The age group with the highest rate of new HIV infections this year in the US is estimated to be: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 1-13 years old 13-24 years old 25-40 years old 40-55 years old Over 55 years of age 20% 1 20% 20% 2 3 20% 4 20% 5 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org LA Statistics (09/30/12) HIV/ AIDS Diagnosis in 2011 by Age 380 400 350 325 323 300 243 250 0-12 13-24 25-34 200 35-44 150 45+ 100 50 4 0 <1 % 25% DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org All of the following are examples of factors of increased risk for HIV for adolescents EXCEPT: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Feelings of invulnerability Size of the ectropion Peer pressure Consistency of condom use Rate of other STDs All of the above DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org HIV Risk in Youth • Exploration of sexuality • Lack of sense of risk and feeling of invincibility • Lack of condom use • Incidence of other STDs • Social situations – ie homelessness • Transformation zone • Access to care • Domestic or sexual abuse • Mental health issues • Substance abuse issues • Commercial sexual behavior • Social networking and sexting DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org RISK FACTORS • High Rates of STDs • Biologically More Susceptible – Columnar tissue thin and friable – Earlier menarche • History of Sexual Abuse • Types of sexual activity DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org 14% 0% 81% 5% The transformation zone 1. Is a clinic which caters to transgendered youth 2. Is larger in older women than younger women 3. Is area of the cervix which changes from squamous to columnar epithelium 4. Is the area where the vaginal tissue has the highest density of lymphocytes DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Cervical Epithelium DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Sexual Activity • J Peds & Adol GYN, Volume 20, Issue 5, Oct 2007, Pp 299-304 • Reproductive health histories from 350 sexuallyexperienced adolescent females aged 12-18 participating in a 5-year STI acquisition study at an urban health center DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Sexual Activity • 41% teens had sexual relations with casual partners, 86% with main partners • Anal intercourse – 16% with main partners and 12% of those with casual partners • Condom use more with casual than main – Vaginal – 61% versus 32.4% – Anal – 47.1% vs 21.3% • Casual relationship – more likely to use anal intercourse for contraception DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Anal Intercourse in Young Adults • Gorbach PM et al. Anal intercourse among young heterosexuals in three sexually transmitted disease clinics in the United States. Sex Transm Dis 2009 Mar 4; e-pub ahead of press. • 2001-2004: Interviewed 1084 heterosexual 18-26 y/o patients in Seattle, New Orleans, and St. Louis presenting to an STD clinic • 37% had anal intercourse at some point • 28.9% had anal intercourse with at least 1 of last 3 partners • 19% had anal intercourse with their last partner • Women reported less condom use with last AI than men (26% versus 45%, p<0.001) • Risk for AI for women: meeting partner same day, having over 3 partners in lifetime, and having sex for money DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Risky behavior • 2009 – 46% of high school students had had intercourse • • • • 34% in past three months 39% did not use a condom the last time 77% did not use other contraception 14% had 4 or more partners in lifetime – 8300 cases of HIV in 13-24 year olds – Nearly half of all new STDs in 15-24 year olds – > 400,000 teen girls gave birth www.cdc.gov fact sheets on Sexual Behaviors of Adolescents DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Patients are at highest risk of potential exposure to HIV at which developmental stage: 0% 9% 55% 36% 0% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Prepubertal Early adolescence Middle adolescence Late adolescence Middle age DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Middle Adolescence ages 14-16 • Often the greatest experimental, risk-taking time • Drinking, drugs, smoking, and sexual experimentation highest interest between 12 and 16 years • This is when first intercourse, first drink, or first pregnancy frequently occur DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Middle Adolescence • • • • Little concept of cause and effect Omnipotence and invulnerability are the rule Unpredictable surges in sexual drive Sexuality is often the MAJOR preoccupation of the middle adolescent DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org RISK FACTORS CONTINUED • Minority Youth • Serial Monogamy • Gay and bisexual males • Homeless or runaway youth DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Minority MSM • African-American male youth – Frequently don’t identify as “gay” or “bisexual” – Prevalence up to 33% – 4% - 8% chance of acquisition per year 40-60% chance infected by age 40 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org CDC Recommendations for HIV Screening and Testing DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org The CDC recommends routine HIV screening for what age range 20% 20% 20% 20% 20% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 1 year to 13 years 13 years to 23 years 13 years to 50 years 13 years to 64 years 24 years to 99 years DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Risk assessment • HIV Testing should be offered routinely from 13-64 years of age • Consider yearly testing in 13-24 year old and others at high risk • Testing based ONLY on reported risk discouraged • 25 years of age and older – yearly risk assessment and consider testing DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Assessment in Youth • Assure confidentiality • Refrain from speaking with parents privately without expressed permission from youth • Assure parents do not stand outside room • Place siblings in different rooms • Obtain patient’s cell phone at each visit and assure patient that results will be given directly to him/her • Ask nursing staff to knock before entering and refrain from talking with parents without patient’s express consent Nass MT, Pasternak RH. HIV Clinician Spring 2012; 24(2): 3-6 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Assessment in youth • Repeat the same questions to each patient • Perform risk assessments at preventive and acute care visits • Don’t assume patient understands the ? – Consider rephrasing it • Ask patient what they mean by “sex” and ask about specific behaviors • Lead with questions that minimize vulnerability • Use gender neutral language • Avoid using personal norms as standards Nass MT, Pasternak RH. HIV Clinician Spring 2012; 24(2): 3-6 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Testing and Treatment Considerations in Youth DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Case 2 • A 15 year old young woman decides to become sexually active with her 24 year old boyfriend. They do not use condoms because he wants her to “prove her love” and tells her she is his only girlfriend. • She later finds out that he also has a boyfriend so she goes to her school based clinic and asks for a test for STDs. Her rapid HIV test is positive. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org HIV Testing • Consent legal age depends on state law • “Opt-in” versus “Opt-out” • When possible, use rapid testing for youth DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Repeat testing • Patients at high risk for HIV based on risk assessment, offered yearly – Adolescents are classified as “high risk” – MSM – IVDU – Known HIV+ partners DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Requested Testing • Usually within first 24 hours of a high risk behavior • Often requested when they had a previous positive test to confirm. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org ACTS in terms of HIV counseling and testing refers to: 1. Advise, confer, teach, simulate 0% 2. Assessment, counseling, testing, support 92% 3. Advertise, coerce, train, supervise 8% DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org ACTS • Assessment: – Education – Identification of risk factors – Provide recommendations for testing, prevention, and referral DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org ACTS • Assessment • Counseling – Clarifies meaning of positive and negative test – Patient readiness and social support network are assessed – Consent is obtained DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org ACTS • Assessment • Counseling • Testing – Rapid testing preferred except when hospitalized – Must confirm positive results with Western Blot DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org ACTS • • • • Assessment Counseling Testing Support – Negative result – stress importance of retest in 3 months and ways to decrease risk – Positive result – offer support and referral for treatment and prevention. Discuss partner notification. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Factors for Testing: Connect 2 Protect (ATN) • Individual factors – Less likely if • < 18 y/o • Still in school – More likely if • • • • • • • African-American (2 x) G/L/B activity (3x) Had 3 or more sex partners in 3 months Ever had an STI Used condoms “half the time” or less Using substances during the sexual encounter Had a known HIV+ partner Straub DM, Arrington-Sanders R, Harris DR et al. Correlates of HIV Testing History Among Urban Youth Recruited Through Venue-Based Testing in 15 US Cities. Sexually Transmitted Diseases 2011 Aug; 38(8): 691-6. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Factors for Testing Connect 2 Protect (ATN) (Straub) • Partner Factors – Less likely if • > or = 1 episode when a partner made them have sex without a condom • Had a partner with unknown status compared to those with HIV negative partners (p<0.001) – More likely if • Partner who used hard drugs • Partner who had relationships outside the primary (p<0.001) DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org HIV Testing in Adolescents • 16,410 students who participated in 2009 national Youth Risk Behavior Survey – 7,591 reported ever having intercourse • • • • 22.6% had ever been HIV tested Used IV drugs at least once (280) - 41% ever HIV tested Forced to have sex (1055) - 36% ever tested for HIV Did not use condom at last intercourse (4797) – 28.7% tested • Had 4 or more partners (2292) – 34.7% tested Balaji AB, Eaton DK, Voetsch AC et al. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2012 Jan (epub) with editorial by D’Angelo L. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Diagnosis Reactions • • • • • Denial Anger Unwillingness to disclose Depression Stoicism DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org 821-4611 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Health Promotion After Diagnosis • Sexual health education • Disclosure education • Importance of adherence to medical care and medications • Treatment as prevention • Harm reduction counseling regarding illicit drug use • Support of youth as they continue to mature • Transition of care when ages to adulthood DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Disclosure • To the perinatally infected youth • To friends or family – Possible ostracism or loss of shelter – Trust to not disclose to others – Infection control issues • To sexual partners – < 25% disclose to casual partners – The longer the person is with a partner, the more likely they are to disclose – Worry about rejection, disclosure to others, violence DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Therapy Readiness • • • • • Adequate support Stability in the teen’s life Change in health status/lab results Access to HIV care Decision made jointly by the patient and provider • Supportive and nonjudgmental about the adolescent’s decision DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Medication • Tanner stage I or II – pediatric guidelines for dosing • Tanner Stage III or IV who have began growth spurt and Stage V – adult dosing • REACH Study – 40% of adolescents reported full adherence DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Adherence to ART by Youth • Chandwani S et al. J Adol Health 2012; 51: 242-51 • 104 participants – 65.4% reported full adherence – Indicators of likely failure • • • • • • • Behaviorally acquired disease (OR 4.378) AIDS diagnosis (OR 4.78) Discussed HIV disease with providers (OR 4.57) Reported difficulty with medication regimen (OR 1.84) Experienced internalizing behavior problems Used drugs Missing doses because of forgetfulness (OR 2.53) DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Immunizations • Human Papilloma Virus • Meningococcus • Tetanus / diphtheria / pertussis • Influenza • Pneumococcus • Hepatitis A & B • Varicella zoster • Measles – mumps – rubella Begue R. HIV Clinician Spring 2012; 24(2): 15-9 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org PAP Smears in Perinatally Infected Youth • Guidelines in general – Begin at 21 years of age – HIV positive women – 2 in first year then yearly after that; refer to colposcopy if anything beyond ASCUS – Perinatally infected • PACTG 219 – 48 of 101 girls with a PAP had abnormal findings – ASCUS in 18 – LGSIL in 27 – HGSIL in 3 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Case 3 • A 13 year old perinatally HIV infected girl is living with her adoptive parents. • Her biological mother died of AIDS shortly after she was born. • The parents tell you that their daughter is doing well on antiretroviral treatment but they haven’t told her she has AIDS or that she is adopted. • When you meet with the daughter she tells you that she has a boyfriend and right now all they do is kiss. DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Pregnancy in Perinatally Infected Youth • Badell ML, Lindsay M. AIDS Res Treat 2012 • 70% of these youth want children • Premature Delivery – Of 10 perinatally infected women with pregnancies, 31% had premature ROM and delivery (compared to 13-18% in usual adolescents) {Williams 2008, A J Ob Gyn} – In 9 patients in Europe, 44% incidence of premature delivery {Thorne 2007, AIDS} – 34 perinatally infected women versus 54 sexually infected women mean gestational age at delivery 33.7 versus 38.8 {Beckerman 2011, Proceedings of the IDSA Annual Meeting} – Prospective study in India of 30 pregnancies no increase in prematurity DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Challenges • Poor access to care • Lack of experience with and negative perceptions of health care system • Unorthodox self-perceptions of sexual orientation • HIV stigma • Sexual minority stigma DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org Contact Info • Ronald D. Wilcox MD FAAP • E-Mail: [email protected] [email protected] • Delta AETC: www.deltaaetc.org • Cell Phone: 504-491-1219 DELTA REGION AIDS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CENTER • deltaaetc.org