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Challenging Cases from the Clinic

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43-year-old man presents to ED with four weeks fever, increasing DOE, cough and weight loss ... 45-year-old AA man diagnosed with HIV and Candida esophagitis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Challenging Cases from the Clinic


1

Challenging Cases from the Clinic
Eric S. Daar, MDProfessor of MedicineDavid
Geffen School of Medicine at University of
California Los Angeles
International AIDS SocietyUSA
2
Current challenges facing treatment-experienced
patients
  • Adherence
  • Drug resistant virus
  • On therapy
  • Off therapy
  • Persistent low-level viremia
  • Poor immune reconstitution
  • Drug toxicity
  • Comorbid conditions
  • Coinfection
  • Metabolic, renal, hepatic dysfunction

3
Patient NL
  • 43-year-old man presents to ED with four weeks
    fever, increasing DOE, cough and weight loss
  • Known to be HIV-infected since 2000 with
    intermittent ARV therapy in Texas prior to
    stopping all meds and moving to Los Angeles
    approximately 12 months ago
  • Lowest CD4 in past was 25 cells/uL
  • Patient states last CD4 was 290 cells/uL but not
    aware of previous viral loads
  • ARVs changed several times in the past he is
    aware of having received at least ZDV, 3TC, d4T,
    TDF, EFV, NFV, LPV/r and most recently DRV/r

4
Patient NL
  • Physical exam
  • T-103.2o F, BP 110/60, HR 110 regular, RR 25, RA
    pulse ox 88 (RA ABG 7.45/30/55)
  • Dyspneic, thin, oral thrush, onychomycosis
  • Labs
  • HCT 32, normal liver enzymes, creatinine 0.9
    mg/dL, LDH 722 Units/L
  • CD4 12 cells/uL
  • Started on TMP/SMX and prednisone

5
Immediate vs. Deferred ARVs during Acute OI
ACTG 5164
HR 0.53 Immediate versus Deferred 95 CI
0.30, 0.92, p0.023
Zolopa AR, et al. PLoS ONE 20094e5575.
6
Patient NL Clinical course
  • It is decided that ARV therapy would not be
    started during the acute illness
  • Patient responds to therapy and BAL confirms
    diagnosis of PCP
  • Patient is discharged and follows up in clinic
    post discharge and then again one week later with
    marked improvement in status and states ready to
    start ARVs
  • CD4- 10 cells/uL
  • HIV RNA 1.2 million c/mL
  • No information regarding previous treatment has
    become available

7
Disappearance of Resistance after Treatment
Interruption
Deeks SG, et al. N Engl J Med 2001344 477-80.
8
BENCHMRK-1 and -2 VL lt50 c/mL at Week 24 by
Specific Agents in OBR
of pts with HIV RNA lt50 c/mL at Week 24 by
selected ARTs in OBT
Mean ? from BL
Enfuvirtide
N
Darunavir
80
44


74
23
45
82

-
50
24
78
68
-

48
48
191
62
-
-
91
22
First use in OBT - Not used in OBT
0
20
40
60
80
100
Virological failures carried forward ARTs
antiretroviral therapies
Cooper DA, et al. NEJM 2008 359355-365.
9
Patient NN
  • 45-year-old AA man diagnosed with HIV and Candida
    esophagitis
  • CD4 count- 20 cells/uL
  • HIV RNA- 476,000 c/mL
  • History of HTN
  • No drug or alcohol use
  • Labs normal except CrCl- 61 mL/min, 1
    proteinuria, ALT- 80-100 U/L
  • HCV-negative
  • HBsAg, HBeAg-neg, HBV DNA gt1 million copies/mL
  • Baseline HIV drug resistance GT- wild type

10
IAS-USA Guidelines When to Initiate Therapy in
Treatment-Naïve Patients
Hammer SM, et al. JAMA 2008 300 555-570
11
DHHS Guidelines When to Initiate Therapy in
Treatment-Naïve Patients (Nov 3, 2008)
DHHS Guidelines for the Use of ARV Agents in
HIV-1-Infected Adults and Adolescents November
3, 2008. http//www.aidsinfo.nih.gov/ContentFiles/
AdultandAdolescentGL.pdf. Accessed November 3,
2008
12
Treatment Criteria for ChronicHepatitis B
13
Patient NN
  • Factors associated with poor immune
    reconstitution
  • Starting with lower CD4 cells
  • Older age
  • HIV-2 coinfection
  • HTLV coinfection
  • Other coinfections
  • Suboptimal virologic response
  • Select antiretrovirals (e.g. ZDV, EFV?)

14
SILCAAT Primary EndpointOpportunistic Disease
or Death
Avg. Difference in CD4 counts over study period
59 cells/mm3 (Plt0.001)
Levy Y, et al. 16th CROI Montreal, Canada
February 8-11, 2009. Abst. 90bLB.
15
HBV Antiviral Therapy Cross Resistance
N236T
L180M
M204V
M250V
A184G
V173L
A181V
S202I
M204I
LAM
ETV
LdT
FTC
ADV
TDF
16
Patient RLB
  • 48-year-old male diagnosed with HIV in 1984 (CD4-
    220 cells/uL)
  • Antiretroviral experience through 2006
  • All NRTIs, EFV and all PIs except DRV and TPV
  • Mostly viremic throughout
  • 2006-2007 ZDV/3TC/ABC TDF LPV/r
  • CD4 250 cells/uL, RNA 5-10,000 copies/mL
  • Historical GTs have shown multiple TAMs, protease
    mutations and NNRTI mutations- 98G, 108I, 181C
  • 2007 resistance testing
  • GT- resistant to all drugs
  • PT- resistant to all except intermediate to DRV/r

17
DUET-1 and -2 Predictors of ETR Response and
Resistance at Failure
  • ETR mutations (n17) weighted based upon impact
    on response (weight factor)1
  • 3.0- Y181I/V
  • 2.5- L100I, K101P, Y181C, M230L
  • 1.5- V106I, V179F, E138A, G190S
  • 1.0- V90I, A98G, K101E/H,
    V179D/T, G190A

Adapted from Vingerhoets J, et al.
Vingerhoets J, et al. 17th IHDRW Sitges, Spain,
2008, Abstract 24.
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