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OIs

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... (46-200 mg/dL) positive CSF VDRL positive peripheral syphilis serology ... clinical presentation, characteristic lesions, risk strata & positive serology ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OIs


1
OIs Management in AIDS
  • Dr. B.D.Benroy
  • Program Officer (STD)
  • Kerala State AIDS Control Society,
  • Trivandrum.

2
CD4 Cell Counts and Opportunistic Infections
3
CD4 Cells Risk of OI
  • CD4 cells gt500/?L Recurrent vaginal
    candidiasis, PGL
  • CD4 cells 200-500/?L Herpes zoster, oral
    candidiasis, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia,
    Kaposi sarcoma, non-Hodgkins lymphoma
  • CD4 cells 100-200/?L Pneumocystis pneumonia,
    cryptococcosis, AIDS dementia complex, AIDS
    related wasting
  • CD4 cells lt50/?L CMV retinitis, MAI,
    Cryptosporidiosis, progressive multifocal
    leukoencephalopathy, primary CNS lymphoma

4
Incidence of OI
  • Disease
    Incidence / 100 p y
  • All forms of TB 75.9
  • Disseminated TB 14.1
    Lymph
    nodal TB 11.4
  • Pulmonary TB 10.4
  • TB meningitis 3.9
  • Other extra pulmonary TB 2.6
  • 2. Chronic diarrhea 4.8
  • 3. Cryptococcal meningitis 3.7
  • 4. PCP 3.6
  • 5. Neurological illness related to HIV
    0.9
  • 6. Cerebral Toxoplasmosis 0.7

5
Common OI in India
  • Recurrent bacterial infections
  • Tuberculosis
  • Chronic diarrhoea
  • Candidiasis
  • Cryptococcosis
  • Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
  • Toxoplasmosis

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Approach to OI
  • Degree of immunodeficiency (CD4)
  • Prophylactic treatment
  • Exposure to potential pathogens
  • Clinical syndrome
  • Pulmonary complications
  • GI complications
  • Neurologic complications
  • Undifferentiated fever (PUO)

8
Pulmonary Complications
  • Bacterial pneumonia
  • Tuberculosis
  • Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP)

9
Pneumocystis Pneumonia
  • Symptoms dry cough, dyspnea, fever /-
    subacute onset (1-3 wk) CD4 lt200 cells
  • Chest x-ray interstitial infiltrates, ground
    glass appearance normal x-ray in 10
  • Diagnosis induced sputum, BAL

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12
PCP Treatment
  • Preferred TMP-SMX (TMP 15 mg/kg/d) x 21 days
  • Alternatives TMP dapsone, pentamidine,
    clindamycin primaquine
  • Steroids for pt. with severe disease (paO2 lt70
    mm Hg or A-a gradient gt35 mm Hg)
  • Maintenance TMP-SMX 1 DS tab od

13
Bacterial Pneumonia
14
HIV and Tuberculosis - 1
  • HIV ? people have ? risk of primary or
    reactivation tb reinfection
  • lifetime risk of HIV neg., PPD ? persons
    developing active tb - 10
  • risk of developing active tb in HIV ?, PPD ?
    person - 7-10/year

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HIV and Tuberculosis - 2
  • Pulmonary TB the commonest form
  • Resembles post-primary PTB in early stages
    (fibro-cavitary disease) primary PTB in late
    stages (hilar adenopathy, lower zone infiltrates)
  • Extra-pulmonary, disseminated TB mycobacteremia
    seen in advanced stages

17
CxR Findings in TB Patients with HIV Infection
Late HIV (severely immuno-compromised)
Early HIV
18
PTB in Early Late HIV Infection
19
AFB Smear
20
Tuberculosis Chest X-ray
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Initiation of Antiretroviral Therapy for Patients
with TB To Start or to Delay?
  • Reasons to Start ART
  • Decrease morbidity and mortality related to
    HIV/AIDS
  • Reasons to delay ART
  • Overlapping side effects from ART and anti-TB
    therapy
  • Complex drug-drug interactions
  • Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome
  • (paradoxical reactions)
  • Difficulties with adherence to multiple
    medications

24
HIV Tb Treatment
  • Duration of treatment 6-12 months (2HREZ /
    4-10HR)
  • Rifampicin contra-indicated with PI/NNRTI
    containing HAART regimens
  • Possible options for ART in patients with active
    TB
  • defer ART until TB treatment is completed
  • defer ART until the continuation phase' of
    treatment for TB, and use HE as continuation.
  • treat TB with RIF containing regimen and use
    Efavirenz 2 NRTIs

25
HIV Tb Prophylaxis
  • Chemoprophylaxis effective (RR 0.41)
  • Inefficient in feasibility studies
  • Indications PPD ?5 mm, high-risk exposure
  • Regimens INH (300 mg/d x 12 mo.), RIF (600 mg/d)
    PZA (25 mg/kg/d) x 2 mo.

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GI Complications Syndromic Approach
  • Odynophagia
  • Diarrhoea
  • Jaundice, RUQ pain, hepatomegaly

28
Odynophagia
  • OI or tumor
  • common Candida spp.
  • less common CMV, HSV, aphthous ulcers
  • rare TB, MAI, histoplasmosis, cryptosporidia,
    KS, lymphoma
  • GERD
  • Medications
  • ddC, AZT, tetracycline, NSAIDs, ASA

29
Oral Candidiasis
  • Symptoms thrush, sore mouth
  • Pseudomembranous, atrophic, hyper-plastic,
    angular cheilitis
  • Treatment Nystatin, Fluconazole

30
Oesophageal Candidiasis
  • 1/3 of AIDS pts develop esophageal symptoms
    (dys-phagia, odynophagia) 50-70 due to Candida
    oral thrush in 50-70
  • Usually treated empirically endo-scopy biopsy,
    with HPE cultures, if no response in 7-10 days

31
Chronic Diarrhoea
  • Occurs in 60-90 of pt. with HIV infection
  • Presenting symptom in 1/3
  • OIs most common cause
  • Many pt. have no likely microbial pathogen
  • Enteric infections not always associated with
    diarrhoea

32
Chronic diarrhoea
  • PROTOZOAL
  • Isospora belli
  • Cryptosporidia parvum
  • Microsporidia
  • Giardia lamblia
  • AIDS ENTEROPATHY
  • BACTERIAL
  • MAC
  • Salmonellosis
  • Clostridium
  • Campylobacter
  • VIRAL
  • CMV
  • Adenovirus
  • HSV

33
Diarrhoea Management
  • DIAGNOSIS
  • stool ova parasites x 3 days
  • stool culture
  • small-bowel biopsy
  • colonoscopy with biopsy
  • TREATMENT
  • Cryptosporidia paromomycin azithromycin
  • Isospora TMP-SMX
  • Microsporidia Albendazole
  • HAART
  • Empiric therapy

34
Jaundice
  • Hepatitis
  • drug induced
  • ethanol use
  • HBV, HCV
  • MAI
  • Acalculous cholecystitis and cholangitis
  • CMV
  • cryptosporidium
  • microsporidium

35
HIV and the Nervous System
  • HIV enters the brain immediately after infection,
    is present throughout the course of the disease,
    and, can potentially involve all levels of the
    nervous system - meninges, brain, spinal cord,
    cranial peripheral nerves, skeletal muscle
  • Neurologic disease is the first manifestation of
    symptomatic HIV infection in 10-20 of persons
  • 60 of patients with advanced HIV disease will
    have clinically evident neurologic dysfunction
    during the course of their illness
  • Autopsy studies of patients with advanced HIV
    disease have demonstrated pathologic
    abnormalities of the nervous system in 75-90 of
    cases

36
Neurologic Complications of HIV Infection
  • HIV Related
  • Acute aseptic meningitis
  • Chronic meningitis
  • HIV encephalopathy (AIDS dementia)
  • Vacuolar myelopathy
  • Peripheral neuropathy (sensory)
  • Myopathy
  • O I
  • Cryptococcal meningitis
  • Cerebral toxoplasmosis
  • CMV retinitis encephalitis
  • PML
  • Primary CNS lymphoma
  • TB
  • Syphilis

37
Neurological Complications
  • Global cerebral syndromes
  • Chronic meningitis / meningo-encephalitis
    cryptococcosis, TB, syphilis
  • Focal cerebral lesions
  • Toxoplasma encephalitis, primary CNS lymphoma,
    Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML)
  • Cognitive decline
  • Myelopathy
  • Peripheral neuropathy

38
Cryptococcal Meningitis
  • Subacute meningo-encephalitis
  • Average duration of symptoms 30 days
  • Clinical manifestations
  • headache (90), fever (60-80), stiff neck
    (40-45), seizures (5-10) CD4 lt100/?L
  • Predictors of poor outcomes coma, high opening
    pressure (gt250 mm), WBClt20 cells/mm3, India ink
    preparation cryptococci isolated from
    extra-neural sites
  • Diagnosis confirmed by CSF examination with India
    ink (74-88), Crypto Ag serum/CSF (99), CSF
    culture

39
Cryptococcus neoformans
40
Cryptococcal Meningitis Therapy
  • Acute Ampho B (0.7 mg/kg/d) 5-FC 25 mg/kg QID
    x 14 days then Fluconazole 400 mg/d for 8-10
    weeks
  • Maintenance Fluconazole 200 mg/d x lifelong
    maybe D/C with immune reconstitution with HAART
  • Repeated lumbar puncture for elevated ICP (OP
    gt250 mm)
  • Steroid treatment associated with treatment
    failure death hence, not recommended

41
Neurosyphilis
  • Asymptomatic
  • Syphilitic meningitis
  • Meningo-vascular
  • Parenchymal GPI, tabes dorsalis, gumma
  • Occular uveitis, chorio-retinitis, optic
    neuritis
  • Otologic S-N hearing loss

42
Evaluation of CSF for Neurosyphilis
  • Any HIV seropositive patient with neurologic,
    ophthalmic, or otologic signs or symptoms
  • All patients who fail treatment
  • HIV-infected patients with late latent syphilis
    of gt1 year duration or with syphilis of unknown
    duration

43
Neurosyphilis Diagnosis
  • Positive CSF VDRL with abnormal CSF establishes
    the diagnosis of latent neurosyphilis
  • Sensitivity of CSF VDRL only 70
  • CSF pleocytosis (usually 10-400 cells/mm3) and
    mildly elevated protein (46-200 mg/dL) positive
    CSF VDRL positive peripheral syphilis serology
  • Treatment Pen G 10 L units Q4H i.v. x 10 days

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Toxoplasma Encephalitis
  • Toxoplasma gondii, an obligate intracellular
    protozoan commonest cause of CNS mass lesion in
    AIDS incidence 5-20 CD4 lt100/?L
  • Clinical presentation focal neurological
    deficits (50-89), seizures (15-20), fever
    (56), generalized cerebral dysfunction
    (confusion, coma), neuropsychiatric
    manifestations
  • CT/MRI multiple ring-enhancing lesions located
    in frontal, parietal lobes and/or basal ganglia
    lesions often at corticomedullary junction MRI
    more sensitive than CT
  • Serum Toxoplasma IgG usually positive (97)

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Toxoplasma Encephalitis
  • Diagnosis is presumptive based on clinical
    presentation, characteristic lesions, risk strata
    positive serology
  • Presumptive diagnosis confirmed by tissue sample
    or response to TOXO therapy in appropriate time
    frame
  • 86 patients show clinical improvement by day 7
    of treatment 95 show radiographic improvement
    by day 14
  • Failure to respond within 14 days - consider
    alternative diagnosis indication for brain biopsy

48
Toxoplasma Encephalitis
  • Treatment (for at least 6 weeks, 80-90
    response)
  • Acute Sulfadiazine (4-6 gm/d) or Clindamycin
    (600 mg q6h Pyrimethamine (100-200 mg x 1 dose
    then 50-75mg/d) with folinic acid (10-20 mg/d)
  • Alternatives macrolides (azithromycin,
    clarithromycin) pyrimethamine and folinic
    acid TMP-SMX
  • Maintenance Pyrimethamine 25-50 mg/day SD
    0.5-1.0 G Q6H (life long)
  • Consider stopping in patients who have completed
    primary treatment, are asymptomatic, and have
    sustained (gt6 months) increase in CD4 cell count
    to gt200/µL with HAART
  • Steroids for cerebral edema mass effect

49
AIDS Dementia
  • CD4 100-200 cells/?L
  • Slowly progressive
  • Acquired, persistent cognitive decline, with
    motor behavioural changes
  • Neurologic exam alert, with non-focal or diffuse
    signs
  • CSF non-specific
  • CT/MRI cerebral atrophy, ventricular dilatation
  • Therapy HAART include drugs which cross BBB

50
Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy
  • Multifocal demyelination caused by JC-virus
  • Relatively rapidly progressive neurologic
    syndrome over weeks or months
  • Cognitive dysfunction, ataxia, aphasia, cranial
    nerve deficits, hemiparesis or quadriparesis, and
    eventually coma
  • Typical CT abnormalities include single or
    multiple hypodense, non-enhancing cerebral white
    matter lesions

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53
Neuropathy
  • Distal symmetric polyneuropathy (DSPN)
  • Mononeuropathy multiplex
  • Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy
  • Progressive lumbosacral polyradiculopathy (CMV)

54
D S P N
  • Most common type of neuropathy
  • Symptoms tingling, numbness, burning pain in
    the feet, ascending over time.
  • Exam bilateral depressed ankle reflexes loss of
    vibration sense decreased appreciation of
    temperature distally motor weakness mild
  • Diagnosis of exclusion

55
Vacuolar Myelopathy
  • Pathology non-inflammatory vacuolation of
    myelin, particularly in the lateral and posterior
    columns of the spinal cord
  • Upper thoracic cord affected most commonly
  • Clinically pathologically identical to subacute
    combined degeneration (B12 deficiency)
  • Subacute progression of motor (spastic
    paraparesis, brisk knee reflex absent ankle
    reflex)) and sensory deficits over several months

56
I R I S
  • OI - the hallmark of immune suppression caused by
    HIV
  • PLWHA may have active co-infections that are
    sub-clinical due to the lack of host inflammatory
    responses
  • Reconstitution of the immune system during the
    initial months of HAART may result in the
    development of overt clinical manifestations of
    these co-infections, as restoration of CD4 T
    lymphocytes permits inflammatory responses to be
    mounted - Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory
    Syndrome (IRIS)

57
Case 1 Initial Presentation
  • 35-year old man with HIV-1 infection (CDC stage
    C3) presented in January 2001 with
  • tuberculous lymphadenitis (cervical)
  • oesophageal candidiasis
  • pruritic papular eruptions
  • seborrhoeic dermatitis
  • recurrent dermatophyte infections
  • CD4 cell count was 50 cells/?l (4) (FAC Scan,
    Becton Dickinson)
  • Viral load was 2,66,370 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml
    (Amplicor HIV-1, Roche Systems)

58
Case 1 Clinical Course
  • The patient was started on HAART in October 2002
    (d4T, 3TC, NVP) which he tolerated well
  • Fifteen days after starting therapy the patient
    developed skin lesions - multiple erythematous
    mildly edematous hypoaesthetic to anaesthetic
    plaques on the trunk and extremities
  • The left common peroneal nerve and both cutaneous
    branches of the common peroneal nerves were
    enlarged and non-tender

59
Case 1 - Skin Lesions
60
Case1 - Investigations
  • Slit skin smears from the plaques and normal skin
    were negative for acid fast bacilli
  • Skin biopsy from the edematous plaque on the
    thigh was consistent with borderline tuberculoid
    leprosy in type I reaction
  • CD4 cell count repeated was 112 cells/?l
  • Viral load lt400 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml

61
Case 1 - Management
  • The patient was started on anti leprosy
    chemotherapy with WHO MB MDT regimen, chloroquine
    and a tapering course of steroids (prednisolone),
    with which there was flattening of the skin
    lesions and decreasing erythema
  • HAART was continued unchanged during this period

62
Case 1 Skin Lesions After Treatment
63
Case 2 Initial Presentation
  • 34-yr old man known to have HIV-1 infection was
    admitted with severe (paO2 54.2 mm Hg) PCP
  • CxR HRCT thorax showed bilateral, diffuse
    interstitial infiltrates
  • BAL fluid showed P carinii cysts
  • CD4 count was 110 cells/µl (8) VL 2,30,840
    HIV-1 RNA copies/ml
  • Marked resolution of symptoms, signs and
    radiological appearance with a 21-day course of
    co-trimoxazole and steroids

64
Case 2 Clinical Course
  • 11 days after starting PCP therapy, he was
    started on HAART (AZT, 3TC, EFV)
  • 13 days later, he developed high-grade fever and
    mild cough with scanty expectoration
  • CxR showed marked worsening of the infiltrates
  • Induced sputum examination and blood cultures did
    not reveal any pathogens
  • CD4 repeated was 260 cells/µl
  • Since he remained febrile after one week of
    NSAID, he was started on corticosteroids (x 1
    week) with marked symptomatic improvement
  • HAART was continued uninterrupted

65
Case 2 Chest X-Rays
Oct 14, 2002
Nov 12, 2002
66
Case 3 Initial Presentation
  • 35-year old male with HIV-1 infection (CDC Stage
    3C) presented in Jan 2001 with
  • Isosporiasis
  • Wasting syndrome
  • CD4 T cells 42/µl
  • VL 2,30,508 HIV-1 RNA copies/ml
  • HAART (IDV, AZT, 3TC) in May 2001

67
Case 3 Clinical Course
  • Nov 2001 recurrent diarrhea, cough with
    expectoration, left-sided chest pain
  • Stool o p Isospora belli
  • Sputum AFB smear numerous AFB
  • Treated with ATT (2SHEZ/10HE) and co-trimoxazole
  • HAART continued uninterrupted

68
Case 3 Chest X-Rays
Jan 2003
Nov 2002
69
OI During HAART
  • OI that develop after starting HAART divided into
    three groups
  • Sub-clinical infections unmasked by immune
    reconstitution (IRIS)
  • OI among patients with suppressed HIV RNA and CD4
    cell counts gt200/µl (incomplete immune
    reconstitution)
  • OI among patients experiencing virologic
    immunologic failure

70
HAART in Acute OI
  • Starting HAART in ART-naïve patient with acute OI
  • No specific therapy for OI (e.g.
    cryptosporidiosis, PML) start HAART as soon as
    possible
  • Specific therapy available for OI (PCP, M tb,
    cryptococcal meniingitis) await initial response
    to OI treatment

71
THANK YOU
HAVE A NICE DAY
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