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Page 1: Primary HIV and common HIV/AIDS clinical presentations in the STI clinic setting

Primary HIV and common HIV/AIDS clinical

presentations in the STI clinic setting

David Lewis FRCP(UK) PhDNational Institute for Communicable Diseases

National Health Laboratory ServiceJohannesburgSouth Africa

Page 2: Primary HIV and common HIV/AIDS clinical presentations in the STI clinic setting

Natural history

Acute HIV Clinical latencyDecline in

immune functionAIDS

2 months 3-10 years

Antiretroviral drugsAntiretroviral drugs

Page 3: Primary HIV and common HIV/AIDS clinical presentations in the STI clinic setting

Pathogenesis - I

• HIV transmission enhanced by pre-existing inflammation or breaks in the mucosal surface/skin

• HIV gp120 and gp41 interact with target cells using CD4, CCR5 or CXC4 receptors

• The HIV variants appearing in >90% of acute HIV infections use CCR5

• This may be due to selection by the innate immune response or more efficient outgrowth of CCR5-using populations in the mucosal tissues of new host

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Pathogenesis - II

• Within 72 hours of transmission, local virus replication results in infection at the site of entry and the local LNs – infection systemic by end of first week

• By day 10, most extra lymhoid tissue CCR5+ CD4+ effector-memory T cells have been infected or interacted with HIV

• Viral infection and co-receptor dependent apoptosis produce a dramatic depletion of CCR5+ CD4+ effector-memory T cells between days 10-21 (most pronounced in gut)

• Massive viral replication produces peak levels of viraemia

Page 5: Primary HIV and common HIV/AIDS clinical presentations in the STI clinic setting
Page 6: Primary HIV and common HIV/AIDS clinical presentations in the STI clinic setting

Pathogenesis - III

• Long-lived HIV reservoirs established within first month

• Follicular dendritic cells trap and protect infectious HIV particles and CD4+ memory T cells integrate HIV DNA

• Latently infected cells only produce virus if activated – their 44 month lifespan is a barrier to HIV eradication

• Immune system hyperactivation may result in symptoms of the acute retroviral syndrome

• Immune hyperactivation may be sustained by systemic exposure to bacterial endotoxin following disruption of the gut mucosal immune integrity

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Pathogenesis - IV

• Anti-HIV IgM detected 2-4 weeks after infection – ineffective antibodies as of low titre, low avidity and low affinity

• Reduction in viraemia may reflect (i) exhaustion of CCR5+ CD4+ target cells, and (ii) appearance of specific anti-HIV cytotoxic CD8+ T cells at mucosal sites

• HIV viral loads (VL) declines to attain lowest level by 10 weeks post-infection in both blood and genital secretions

• Some oscillations may occur but steady ‘VL set point’ set by 8-24 weeks

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Pathogenesis - V

• Anti-HIV cytotoxic T cell responses broaden by targeting more HIV epitopes

• First neutralising antibodies against glycosylated epitopes in the HIV envelope appear at same time

• Viral diversity increases – neutralisation escape variants appear and HIV-specific antibody responses broaden

• Set point viraemia determined by both viral factors and host genetics (CCR5 expression levels, HLA types)

• Strong and broad cellular and humoral immune responses are associated with lower set-point viraemia and slower CD4+ T cell loss, immune collapse and clinical progression

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The acute retroviral syndrome

• Approximately 2/3 patients have some symptoms – rest asymptomatic

• Onset of symptoms is usually abrupt after 10-14 day (range 5-35 days) incubation period

Common

Less common

Occasional

fever/malaise, anorexia/weight loss, myalgia/arthralgia

headache (+/- meningeal signs), pharyngitis (+/- tonsillar exudates)rash

diarrhoea, ulceration (oral, oesophageal, genital)

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Physical examination

• Rash (face, trunk, palms, soles)

• Pharyngitis

• Generalised lymphadenopathy

• Ulceration (oral, vaginal or anal)

• Candidiasis (oral, vaginal)

• Cranial nerve palsies (especially CN VII)

• Radiculpathy

• Encephalopathy

• Guillain-Barré syndrome

• Aseptic meningitis

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Laboratory findings

• General leucopenia with atypical lympocytosis

• CD4 lymphopenia

• Mild thrombocytopenia

• Abnormal LFTs

• Lymphocytic pleocytosis (CSF)

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Resolution and prognosis

• Most symptoms and signs resolve within 2 weeks

• Malaise, diffuse lymphadenopathy and laboratory manifestations may persist for several months

• Cohort studies enrolling seroconverting patients have shown that both the number and the duration of acute retroviral symptoms independently increase the risk of disease progression

• Seroconverting patients with >14 day’s acute illness had a 78% risk of progressing to AIDS within 3 years vs. a 10% risk for asymptomatic seroconverters (Lindback et al., 1994)

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Risk factors for acute HIV infection

• Traumatic sex

• Receptive anal intercourse

• Genital ulcer disease in patient and/or partner

• STIs causing urethral/vaginal discharge

• Transactional sex

• IV drug use

• Use of other recreational drugs and sildenafil citrate

• Multiple sexual partners

• Being uncircumcised

• Vaginal douching

• Occupational injuries

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Diagnosis of acute HIV infection

Two types of results are required:

(1) Positive screening assay

- HIV RNA/DNA amplification- HIV p24 antigen- 4th generation EIA (p24 Ag- HIV Ab combo)

(2) Negative or indeterminate HIV antibody assay

For patients at risk of acute HIV but with negative HIV results, repeat testing at least 1 month or longer out from exposure

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Detection of acute HIV with antibody-based assays

• Modern antibody assays are highly sensitive to the presence of low-level, immature IgM-class antibodies

• These assays become positive within 4 weeks of infection (e.g. Western blot assays, HIV rapid tests)

• Less sensitive “detuned” antibody tests can be used to supplement a positive standard antibody result when acute HIV infection is suspected – these assays have reduced affinity or avidity for early HIV antibodies

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Detection of acute HIV with NAAT and antigen assays

• HIV RNA/DNA tests can become positive in the 2nd week of HIV infection – pooling may reduce costs for RNA assays

• Assays for viral core antigens (p24 Ag alone or with 4th generation EIAs) become positive 3-6 days after HIV NAATs

• Antigen assays are useful to diagnose acute HIV in symptomatic patients

• Antigen assays have 77-91% sensitivity for detecting acute HIV in lower-risk populations

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Screening patients with symptoms and/or risk factors for acute HIV

• Up to 13% of patients with a plausible history and compatible symptoms may have acute HIV infection

• For most with acute retroviral symptoms, viral loads are >100,000 copies/ml – low viral loads raise issues of false positive results (up to 2.6% depending on assay)

• Perform HIV RNA and standard antibody assays – if both are positive, perform “detuned” antibody assay

• p24 Ag can substitute for RNA testing if unavailable

• Alternative approach is to screen with 4th generation EIA and confirm positive results with antibody only EIA reflex testing

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Screening for acute HIV infection with routine HIV testing - pooling

• Cost and specificity are more important when screening lower risk patients

• Pooling relies on a group-testing approach using NAATs

• Individual sera contributing to any positive pool are then re-tested individually or in smaller pools using the NAAT assay

• In a roll-out in North Carolina, pooling strategy detected 23 acute HIV cases among 109,250 sera at additional cost of US$ 3.63 per HIV test – represented 4% of all HIV cases detected

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Acute HIV treatment with ARVs: a window of opportunity?

• Acute HIV may represent a unique opportunity to change the course of disease

• Early treatment may provide short-term clinical improvements in those with severe acute retroviral symptoms and/or CD4 lymphopenia

• From an immunological perspective, early treatment may:

- limit the establishment of latent HIV reservoirs

- protect the developing host immune response by infection of HIV-specific CD4 cells

- reduce immune activation

- limit HIV diversification

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Acute HIV treatment with ARVs: what is the evidence that it works?

• Two early studies of a 6 month course AZT vs. placebo in the treatment of acute retroviral syndrome showed, during 12-15 months of follow-up, that the AZT group had a lower prevalence of opportunistic infections and a greater rise in CD4

• Neither study showed a significant reduction in VL and long term follow up failed to show decreased progression to AIDS

• Subsequent trials/reports in the HAART era showed:

- stronger HIV-specific and sustained T cell responses

- decreased frequency of opportunistic infections

- reduced progression to AIDS

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Initiation of continuous ARV therapy during acute HIV infection

• Prospective cohort study of 102 patient treated with HAART before seroconversion (acute) or within one year of seroconversion (early) (Kassutto et al., 2006)

• Most achieved sustained virological suppression by 3 months – still present at 18 months of follow-up

• Mean nadir CD4 was 422 – increased to 702 at the end of year 1 and continued to increase over 60 months in those continuing ARVs (higher than historical controls)

50% of patients discontinued ARVs due to side-effects

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Initiation of short-term ARV therapy during acute HIV infection

• Short-term (discontinuous) ARV therapy for acute retroviral infection has met with mixed results

• Long-term benefits (18 months post cessation of therapy) more marked if ARVs started before seroconversion

• This may be due to the relative preservation of the integrity of the immune system and the resultant stronger HIV-specific response in those treated very early

• Further trials required to assess longer term benefits

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Special considerations for early ARV therapy

• Prognostic value of VL or CD4 cell count before establishment of the viral set point highly questionable

• Prescribe co-trimoxazole as oral prophylaxis against Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia if CD4 < 200 cells/mm3

• Treat as early as possible, i.e. at the time of diagnosis

• Do not delay for adherence discussions, CD4/VL results, HIV genotyping results

• Give 3-4 drugs at start - modify based on HIV resistance genotyping results

• Given high NNRTI resistance levels, best to start with a PI-based regimen

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Key messages regarding ARV treatment of acute HIV infection

• Theoretical reasons support early treatment

• Early benefits evident in trials in terms of CD4 count and disease progression – effect on VL and long term protection remain unclear

• Benefits highest for those with severe symptoms and marked decline in CD4 count

• Decision to treat must be carefully balanced: benefits vs. adverse reactions, metabolic effects, potential unknown long term toxicities, potential for drug resistance, high cost, adherence issues

• Approach should be adopted in specialist centres, ideally in research context

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Sexual transmission of HIV

HIV viral burden in semen

Effect of biological intervention (theoretical)

Cohen MS and Pilcher CD, JID 2005;191:1391-1393

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Example of diagnosis of acute HIV as a public health tool

• In April 2004, a male performer in the Los Angeles-based heterosexual adult film industry found to have acute HIV

• Industry agreed to a 1 month voluntary quarantine while other performers were tested

• 3 (23%) additional acute HIV infections were identified among 13 traced sexual contacts exposed in the 30 days before the index’s HIV RNA test became positive

• Intervention prevented any further HIV transmissions

• Patient-centred , individualised HIV risk reduction counselling is a key strategy in managing acute HIV cases