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HIV infections

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It has an enzyme called reverse transcriptase that makes a DNA copy of its genome ... tests for antibodies to a number of viral antigens by enzyme immunoassay ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HIV infections


1
HIV infections
  • Kevin Forward

2
Characteristics of retroviruses
  • Enveloped, positive-strand RNA virus
  • It has an enzyme called reverse transcriptase
    that makes a DNA copy of its genome
  • The DNA copy is integrated into the host
    chromosome to become a cellular gene
  • Subfamilies of retroviruses
  • Oncoviruses (HTLV-1, HTLV-2)
  • Lentiviruses (HIV-1, HIV-2)
  • AIDS
  • HIV positive, less than 200 CD4 cells, or an
    AIDS indicator disease

3
Retrovirus discovery
  • Work had already begun on HTLV1 and 2
  • HIV discovered in 1981 by Gallo and Montagnier in
    patients with early AIDS
  • Subsequently, HIV-2 was isolated in West Africa

4
Epidemiology
  • Global Distribution
  • Over 50 million infected with HIV world wide,
  • 3 million deaths per year.
  • 7 million new infections per year,
  • 580,000 new infections in children per year.
  • Two-thirds of world HIV infections in Sub-Saharan
    Africa where prevalence is 1 out of 13 people
    between 15-49 yo.
  • One out of 100 sexually active adults in world
    infected with HIV

5
Adults and Children Living with HIV/AIDS 2004
Eastern Europe Central Asia 1.4 million
Western Europe 610,000
N. America 1.0 million
S SE Asia 7.1 million
North Africa 540,000
Caribbean 440,000
Sub-Saharan Africa 25.4 million
Latin America 1.9 million
Total 39.4 (35.9 44.3) Million
Data from UNAIDS
6
Global View of HIV infection
7
In Canada
  • Trends
  • More people who use needles to inject drugs are
    being infected
  • Half of all new HIV infections are in people
    under 25 years old
  • Young rather than older gay men are especially at
    risk
  • More women are becoming infected
  • More people living with HIV and AIDS due to
    decline of deaths

8
Transmission
  • HIV is present in
  • blood (or fluids contaminated by blood and serum)
  • semen
  • vaginal fluids
  • Host related factors are biggest determinate
  • Factors that increase infectiousness primary
    infection, late stage infection, genital tract
    infections
  • Risk probabilities
  • female to male 1 in 700-3000
  • male to female 1 in 200-2000
  • Male to male 1 in 10-1600
  • Needle stick 1 in 200
  • Mother to infant 1 in 4 (with treatment 1 in
    25)
  • Transfusion of infected blood 1 in 450.000 per
    unit)

9
The virus Structure
  • Medium size virus with an envelope acquired from
    the host cell plasma membrane
  • Each virus contains two copies of positive-strand
    RNA
  • Each virus also contains 10-50 copies of reverse
    transcriptase and integrase enzymes

10
Replication
  • The mushroom shaped gp120 of HIV interacts with
    the CD4 surface molecule expressed on T-helper
    lymphocytes and cells of the macrophage lineage
  • Macrophages
  • Dendritic cells
  • Microglial cells (brain cells)
  • HIV enters the cell by fusion with the cellular
    envelope

Primary receptor CD4Co-receptor CXCR4 or CCR5
11
Replication (contd)
  • After release, the reverse transcriptase
    synthesizes a complementary DNA strand
  • A copy of the DNA strand is then produced
  • Once integrated, viral DNA is transcribed like
    other host genes
  • Each copy contains approximately five errors or
    mutations

12
Viral protease
RNA
RNA
Proteins
Reverse transcriptase
RT
RNA
RNA
DNA
Viral regulatory proteins
RT
DNA
DNA
Provirus
13
Pathogenesis
  • HIV infection of CD4 lymphocytes results in cell
    death by a direct effect or by triggering
    apoptosis (programmed cell death)
  • Antibodies against gp120 may produce antibody
    dependent cytotoxicity
  • Other cells are spared and may serve as important
    reservoirs of virus
  • CD4s are primarily responsible for delayed type
    hypersensitivity and cell mediated immunity
  • As CD4 cells are lost, opportunistic infections
    and malignancies occur

14
Clinical syndromes
  • Initial infection
  • symptoms occur within weeks of infection
  • many are asymptomatic but some develop infectious
    mononucleosis-like symptoms viral meningitis or
    rash
  • Primary infection may be followed by a long
    symptom free period during which CD4 cells slowly
    reduce in number

15
Progression of HIV Infection
Primary Infection
Possible acute HIV syndrome Wide dissemination of
virus Seeding of lymphoid organs

1200
1100
Death
1000
Opportunistic Diseases
1512
Intermediate stage
900
1256
800
1128
700
CD4 T-cells/mm3
164
Constitutional Symptoms
600
Plasma viremia titer
132
500
116
400
18
300
14
200
12
100
0
Weeks
Years
16
Clinical syndromes
AIDS develops when any of a number of signs of
CD4 depletion occur
  • opportunistic infections
  • oral candidiasis
  • toxoplasmosis
  • cryptococcal meningitis
  • severe herpes infections
  • cytomegalovirus infections
  • tuberculosis
  • Pneumocystis pneumonia
  • malignancies
  • Kaposis sarcoma
  • Lymphoma
  • Cervical cancer
  • AIDS related dementia
  • wasting syndrome

17
Major complications in the course of HIV
infection
Lymphoma
400
Tuberculosis
Herpes zoster, thrush, HSV
CNS disorders (HIV)
Bacterial infections, esophageal candidiasis
CD4/mm3
Pneumocystosis
200
Wasting
Toxoplasmosis
Atypical mycobacteriosis
100
CMV, cryptosporidiosis
microsporidiosis
20
PML
Time in years from infection
18
Laboratory aspects
  • Serology
  • Screening tests for antibodies to a number of
    viral antigens by enzyme immunoassay
  • Confirmation using Western blot
  • Immunologic studies
  • CD4 counts
  • Viral load testing (PCR quantitation of RNA in
    plasma)
  • Resistance genotyping (looking at the sequences
    of the genes in the HIV to see if the sequences
    have the mutations that cause resistance)

Cultures are seldom done anymore
19
Positive HIV Western Blot
20
Treatment of HIV/AIDS
  • Three classes of anti retrovirals
  • Nucleoside analogs
  • Non nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
  • Protease inhibitors
  • Usually Highly Active Anti Retroviral Therapy
    (HAART) is used
  • Problems include
  • Side effects, compliance, resistance, cost
  • Controversy exists on early or late initiation as
    all of these things need to be balanced.

21
Suppression of plasma viremia by HAART
106 105 104 103 102 101
1,600 1,200 800 400 0
CD4 count (cells/mm³)
Plasma viral load (copies/mL)
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Months after treatment
22
Why Antiretroviral Therapy?
23
Why Antiretroviral Therapy?
24
Needle stick exposure
  • Risk of infection depends on
  • Stage of the patients disease
  • How much blood (hollow vs solid, gauge of needle,
    aspiration vs injection)
  • What to do
  • Confirm patients status
  • Document your status
  • Begin antiviral prophylaxis

25
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