HIV/AIDS M3 lecture - Creighton University
Download
Report
Transcript HIV/AIDS M3 lecture - Creighton University
HIV/AIDS
M3 lecture
Angela Remington, MD MS
Fellow Infectious Diseases
Updated 2005
Introduction
AIDS first recognized 1981
HIV RNA retrovirus discovered 1983
2nd leading cause of disease burden
worldwide
Leading cause of death in Africa
Approx 1 million people currently
diagnosed in America
Transmission of HIV
Blood, semen, breast milk, saliva
Sexual, parenteral, vertical
Risk of contracting infection dependent on
– Viral load
– Integrity of the exposed site
– Type of body fluid
– Volume of body fluid
Transmission of HIV
Risk after a single exposure
– >90% blood or blood products
– 14% vertical
– 0.5-1% injection drug use
– 0.2-0.5% genital mucous membrane
– <0.1% non-genital mucous membrane
MTCT of HIV
Developing countries 40%
On Zidovudine alone 7%
Zidovudine with C-section 2%
HAART <1% if viral load <50 copies
80% of those infected vertically are
infected close to the time of delivery
Transmission
Risk of transmission is now 1/10,000,000
with each unit of blood
100 confirmed cases from healthcare
exposure
Risk with needle stick 0.32%
Risk with mucous membrane exposure
0.03%
global
Estimated 42 million people living with
HIV/AIDS in 2002
5 million new infections per year
3 million deaths per year
Parts of Africa 25-40% of adults are
infected
85% heterosexual transmission worldwide
The Virus
Glycoproteins (gp 120, gp41)
2 copies of ssRNA, viral enzymes
Attachment with gp 120 to CD4 receptor
Fusion mediated by gp 41
Inside cell RNA transcribed to DNA by RT
DNA incorporated into cell genome
DNA is copied and translated to viral enzymes,
proteases
New infectious virus buds from host cell to
repeat process
Immunology
Gradual reduction in number of circulating
CD4 cells inversely correlated with the
viral load
Any depletion in numbers of CD4 cells
renders the body susceptible to
opportunistic infections
Lymphatic tissue (spleen, lymph nodes,
tonsils/adenoids) main reservoir of HIV
Primary Infection
70-80% symptomatic, 3-12 weeks after
exposure
Fever, rash, cervical lymphadenopathy,
aseptic meningitis, encephalitis, myelitis,
polyneuritis
Surge in viral RNA copies to >1 million
Fall in CD4 count to 300-400
Recovery in 7-14 days
Seroconversion
3-12 weeks, median 8 weeks
Level of viral load post seroconversion
correlates with risk of progression of
disease
Differential for this syndrome: EBV, CMV,
Strep pharyngitis, toxoplasmosis,
secondary syphilis
Asymptomatic phase
Remain well with no evidence of HIV
disease except for generalized
lymphadenopathy
Fall of CD4 count by about 50-150 cells
per year
Symptomatic phase
Mild impairment of immune system
Chronic weight loss
Fever
Diarrhea
Mild candida infections
Recurrent herpes infections
Pelvic inflammatory disease
Bacillary angiomatosis
Cervical dysplasia
AIDS
CD4 <200
– Pneumocystis pneumonia
– Esophageal Candidiasis
– Mucocutaneous herpes simplex
– Miliary/extrapulmonary TB
– Cryptosporidium
– HIV-associated wasting
– Microsporidium
– Peripheral neuropathy
AIDS
CD <100
– Cerebral toxoplasmosis
– Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
– Cryptococcal meningitis
– HIV-associated dementia
– Primary CNS Lymphoma
– Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
AIDS
CD4<50
– CMV retinitis, gastroenteritis
– Disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex
Diagnosis
Antibody test, ELISA
Western blot
HIV RNA viral load
Skin and Oral disease
Seborrheic dermatitis
Xeroderma
Itchy folliculitis
Scabies
Tinea
Herpes zoster
Papillomavirus
Oral and vaginal candidiasis
Oral hairy leukoplakia
Aphthous ulcers
Herpes simplex
Gingivitis
Kaposi’s sarcoma
Molluscum contagiosum
Bacillary angiomatosis
GI disease
Esophageal candidiasis
Large bowel disease (bloody diarrhea)
– C. diff
– CMV
Small bowel disease (watery diarrhea)
–
–
–
–
–
Cryptosporidium
Microsporidium
Giardia
MAC
CMV
Pulmonary Disease
Pneumocystis pneumonia
Bacterial pneumonia
Nocardia
Pneumocystis pneumonia
Most common AIDS presenting illness
Reactivation of infection (original airborne
transmission, asymptomatic, early age)
Inversely correlated with CD4 count
40% of patients with CD4 <100 and not
prophalaxed will have pneumonia annually
Prophalaxis started at CD4 <200,
trimethoprim/sulfa, dapsone, atovaquone,
pentamidine
Pneumocystis pneumonia
2-3 week history of SOB and dry cough
Hypoxemia
Perihilar ground glass appearance on CXR
Silver stain of organism in sputum
High dose trimethaprim/sulfa, steroid if
hypoxic
Nervous system disease
Toxo
Crypto
PML
CMV retinitis
Dementia
Peripheral neuropathy
Management
Treatment recommended when
symptomatic or CD4 count below 200
Earlier if high viral load, rapidly falling CD4
count, hepatitis C co-infection
antiretrovirals
Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors
Protease inhibitors
Fusion inhibitors
R5/X4 inhibitors
NRTIs
ddC
ddI
3TC
ZDV
d4T
Abacavir
FTC
NNRTIs
Nevirapine
Efavirenz
Delavirdine
PIs
Indinavir
Saquinavir
Ritonavir
Nelfinavir
Lopinavir/ritonavir
Amprenavir
Fosamprenavir
Tipranavir
Atazanavir
Others
T-20
Tenofovir
R5/X4 under development
Side effects
NRTIs: mitochondrial dysfunction
ddC, ddI, d4T: neuropathy
d4T, ddI: hepatic steatosis, lactic acidosis
ddI: pancreatitis
ZDV: anemia
d4T: fat atrophy
Abacavir: hypersensitivity reaction
Tenofovir: renal failure
NNRTIs: rash, liver toxicity
PIs: fat redistribution, insulin resistance, hyperlipidemia
Indiavir: renal stones
Nelfinavir: diarrhea