Title: Strategies for Antiretroviral Therapy in Adults
1Strategies for Antiretroviral Therapy in Adults
- Todd S. Wills, MD
- Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine
- Division of Infectious Diseases and International
Medicine - University of South Florida College of Medicine
2Disclosure of Financial Relationships
- This speaker has no significant financial
relationships with commercial entities to
disclose.
This slide set has been peer-reviewed to ensure
that there are no conflicts of interest
represented in the presentation.
3Objectives
- Understand goals of antiretroviral therapy
- Learn predictors of success with long term
antiretroviral treatment - Outline guidelines for initiation of
antiretroviral medications - Review recommended and alternative initial
antiretroviral regimens - Summarize medications to be avoided or used with
caution - Discuss treatment considerations in special
populations
4Goals of Antiretroviral Therapy
- Improvement of quality of life
- Reduction of HIV-related morbidity and mortality
- Restoration and/or preservation of immunologic
function - Maximal and durable suppression of viral load
5Predictors of Long Term Success
- potency of antiretroviral regimen
- adherence to treatment regimen
- low baseline viremia
- higher baseline CD4 cell count and
- rapid (i.e. gt1 log 10 in 1-4 months) reduction of
viremia in response to treatment
6Factors Influencing Therapeutic Success
With Undetectable Viral Load
0
100
- Late disease
- Antiretroviral experienced
- Low-potency regimen
- Highly toxic regimen
- Lack of patient education
Early disease Antiretroviral naive High-potency
regimen Minimally toxic regimen Patient education
7(No Transcript)
8Tools to Achieve Treatment Goals
- Selection of ARV regimen
- Preservation of future treatment options
- Rational sequencing of therapy
- Maximizing adherence
- Use of resistance testing in selected clinical
settings
9Predictors of Inadequate Adherence
- Regimen complexity and pill burden
- Poor clinician-patient relationship
- Active drug use or alcoholism
- Unstable housing
- Mental illness (especially depression)
- Lack of patient education
- Medication adverse effects
- Fear of medication adverse effects
10POOR Predictors of Adherence
- Age, race, sex, educational level, socioeconomic
status, and a past history of alcoholism or drug
use do NOT reliably predict suboptimal adherence. - Higher SES and education levels and lack of
history of drug use do NOT reliably predict
optimal adherence.
11Predictors of Good Adherence
- Emotional and practical supports
- Convenience of regimen
- Understanding of the importance of adherence
- Belief in efficacy of medications
- Feeling comfortable taking medications in front
of others - Keeping clinic appointments
- Severity of symptoms or illness
12Mechanisms to Improve Adherence
- FLEXIBILITY
- Tailoring regimen to the patient
- Establish readiness to start therapy
- EDUCATION
- Potential drug toxicities
- Importance of adherence to avoid resistance
- Reinforce positive effects of therapy
- SUPPORT and REMINDER TOOLS
- Engage family and friends
- Calendars, pillboxes, alarms
13Antiretroviral TherapyWhen to Start
14Indications for Initiation of Therapy Chronic
Infection
15Indications for Initiation of Therapy Chronic
Infection
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18Benefits and Risks of Deferred Therapy
- RISKS
- Possibility of irreversible immune system
depletion - Increased possibility of progression to AIDS
- Possible increased risk of HIV transmission
- BENEFITS
- Avoid negative effects on quality of life
- Avoid drug-related toxicity
- Preserve future drug options
- Delay development of drug resistance
- Decrease total time on medications
19(No Transcript)
20Current Antiretroviral Medications
- NRTI
- Abacavir ABC
- Didanosine DDI
- Emtricitabine FTC
- Lamivudine 3TC
- Stavudine D4T
- Zidovudine ZDV
- Zalcitabine DDC
- Tenofovir TDF
- NNRTI
- Delavirdine DLV
- Efavirenz EFV
- Nevirapine NVP
- PI
- Atazanavir ATV
- Fosamprenavir FPV
- Indinavir IDV
- Lopinavir LPV
- Nelfinavir NFV
- Ritonavir RTV
- Saquinavir SQV
- Tipranavir TPV
- Fusion Inhibitor
- Enfuvirtide T-20
-
21Choosing The NRTI Backbone
- Typically two drugs
- Initial therapy with thymidine-sparing drugs
- Ease of dosing
- co-formulated agents
- Consideration of renal function
22Choosing the First Regimen
- NNRTI and PI options both reasonable
- Additional Considerations
- Co-morbidities
- Sequencing Options
- NNRTI low barrier to resistance
23Important Co-Morbidities
- Cardiovascular Disease
- Lipid sparing drugs
- Hepatic Disease
- Hepatotoxicity
- Potential HBV
- co-infection
- Polypharmacy
- Drug-interactions
- Renal Disease
- Dose modifications
- Contraindicated agents
- Neuropathy
- Psychiatric Disease
- GERD
- Pregnancy/ Child Bearing Age
24Important Dose Adjustments
- NRTIs in renal insufficiency
- Dose adjustment for all except abacavir
- Didanosine when used with tenofovir
- Avoid if possible higher rate of virologic
failure when used with NNRTI - Atazanavir RTV when used with tenofovir
25Initial Treatment Preferred Regimens
NNRTI-Based
pills/day
PI-Based
- Avoid in pregnant women and women with pregnancy
potential.
26Initial Treatment Alternative Regimens
NNRTI-Based
pills/day
- Avoid in pregnant women and women with pregnancy
potential. - Monitor closely for nevirapine-associated
hepatotoxicity.
27Initial Treatment Alternative Regimens
PI-Based
pills/day
28Initial Treatment Alternative Regimens
PI-Based
pills/day
29Initial Treatment Alternative Regimens
NRTI-Based
pills/day
To be used only when a preferred or alternative
NNRTI- or PI-based regimen cannot or should not
be used as first-line therapy.
30Antiretroviral Components in Initial Therapy
NNRTIs
- ADVANTAGES
- Less dyslipidemia
- NVP better than EFV
- Less fat maldistribution than in PI-based
regimens - PI options preserved for future use
- DISADVANTAGES
- Resistance - single mutation
- Cross-resistance among NNRTIs
- Rash hepatotoxicity
- Potential drug interactions (CYP450)
31Antiretroviral Components in Initial Therapy PIs
- DISADVANTAGES
- Metabolic complications (fat maldistribution,
dyslipidemia, insulin resistance) - Greater potential for drug interactions (CYP450),
especially with ritonavir
- ADVANTAGES
- Longest prospective data
- NNRTI options preserved for future use
32Antiretroviral Components in Initial Therapy
NRTIs
- DISADVANTAGES
- Lactic acidosis and hepatic steatosis reported
with most NRTIs (rare) - Triple NRTI regimens show inferior virologic
response compared with efavirenz- and
indinavir-based regimens
- ADVANTAGES
- Established backbone of combination therapy
- Minimal drug interactions
- PI and NNRTI preserved for future use
33NOT Recommended in Initial Treatment
34NOT Recommended in Initial Treatment
35NOT offered at any time
- Regimens not recommended
- Monotherapy (except possibly in prevention of
perinatal HIV transmission) - Dual NRTI therapy
- 3-NRTI regimen of abacavir tenofovir
lamivudine - 3-NRTI regimen of didanosine tenofovir
lamivudine
36(No Transcript)
37Monitoring Antiretroviral Therapy
38Use of HIV RNA CD4 T Cell Levels to Guide
Therapy Decisions
- Syndrome consistent with acute HIV infection
- Initial evaluation of new HIV diagnosis
- Every 3-4 months in the untreated patient
- Immediately prior to initiating therapy
- 2-8 weeks after initiating therapy
- Every 3-4 months in patients on therapy
- As clinically indicated
39Identifying Treatment Failure
- Virologic Failure
- incomplete or lack of HIV RNA response to
antiretroviral therapy - Incomplete Virologic Response (treatment naïve)
- repeated HIV RNA gt400 copies/mL after 24 weeks
- or gt50 copies/mL by 48 weeks
- Virologic Rebound
- repeated detection of HIV RNA after initial
suppression - Immunologic Failure
- failure to increase CD4 cell count by 25-50
cells/mm3 above the baseline count over the first
year. - Mean expected increase approximately 150
cells/mm3 / yr - Clinical Progression
40Causes of Treatment Failure
- baseline patient factors
- higher pretreatment or baseline HIV RNA level
- lower pretreatment or nadir CD4 cell count
- prior AIDS diagnosis
- co-morbidities
- presence of drug resistant virus
- incomplete medication adherence
- drug side effects and toxicity
- suboptimal pharmacokinetics
- suboptimal potency of the antiretroviral regimen
41Use of Drug Resistance Testing
42Testing for Drug Resistance
- Adjunct to guide antiretroviral therapy
- Combine with obtaining a drug history and
maximizing drug adherence - Research supports use in certain settings
- Genotyping vs. phenotyping
- Limitations of resistance testing and specific
indications
43Changing Treatment for Virologic Failure
- perform resistance testing
- Use the treatment history and past and current
resistance test results to identify active agents
(preferably 3 or more) to design a new regimen - If three active agents cannot be identified,
consider pharmacokinetic enhancement of protease
inhibitors - Adding a drug with a new mechanism of action
(e.g. HIV entry inhibitor) - In general, one active drug should not be added
to a failing regimen because drug resistance is
likely to develop quickly
44Second Regimens
- Goal of therapy remains full virologic
suppression - Changes typically due to toxicity or virologic
failure - Resistance testing crucial in guiding regimen
changes
45Changes based on toxicity
- Best to change drugs when viral load fully
suppressed - Primary reasons for changes
- Intolerable, but benign, side-effects
- Hematologic abnormalities
- Metabolic abnormalities
- hepatotoxicity
46NRTI changes based on toxicity
- AZT hematologic toxicity, GI side effects,
headaches - D4T long term neuropathy, hyperlipidemia,
mitochondrial toxicity, lipodystrophy - DDI neuropathy, pancreatitis, mitochondrial
toxicity - ABC hypersensitivity reactions
- TDF renal failure (Fanconis syndrome)
- 3TC/FTC limited toxicity
47NRTI changes based on toxicity
- Favor change from thymidine to non-thymidine
based drug if feasible - AZT less implicated in long-term toxicities than
D4T - May consider elective therapy change prior to
emergence of toxicity - Beware of previous drug exposure
- ? Archived resistance
48NRTI changes due to Virologic Failure
- Guide decisions based on assessment of adherence,
and resistance testing if feasible - 3TC/FTC most implicated in earliest development
of resistance - Prolonged sub-optimal regimen increases risk for
TAMs and may significantly compromise future
choices - Must consider possibility of virologic failure
early
493rd / Salvage Regimens
- Goal full viral suppression vs. improved viral
control - PK enhancement
- Therapeutic drug monitoring
- Re-treatment with prior medications
- Multi-drug regimens (limited by complexity,
tolerability) - New ARV drugs, e.g., enfuvirtide, tipranavir,
TMC-114, investigational drugs - Treatment interruptions not recommended
50Immune Restoration Syndrome
- Collection of inflammatory disorders associated
with paradoxical worsening of preexisting
infectious processes following ART in HIV
infected patients
51 Diagnostic criteria Immune Restoration
- AIDS with low pre treatment CD4 count except TB
- Rapid virological response to ART with decrease
of the VL and increase of CD4 - Association between ART and the clinical features
of the illness - Clinical manifestation of inflammatory condition
- Absence of drug resistant infection, bacterial
superinfection or drug allergy
52Immune Restoration Syndrome - Management
- Treatment of the underling opportunistic
infection - Continue ART if possible. D/C ART if life
threatening immune restoration syndrome and treat
the underliying infection for a period of time
before resuming ART (not an option in PML) - Corticosteroids and NSAIDs
53Special Populations
54Death from End-Stage Liver Disease HIV
patients
55Hepatitis B Co-Infection
- Not candidate for HIV treatment by CD4 (CD4 gt350
in US) - Consider treatment with agent active only against
HBV - Interferon alfa, adefovir
- Candidate for both HIV/HBV treatment
- Agents active against HIV and HBV
- Lamivudine, emtricitabine, tenofovir
- Combination therapy vs. HBV if possible
56Hepatitis C Co-Infection
- Combination therapy
- Ribavirin (1000 1200 mg/d) PLUS
- Interferon (IFN)
- Conventional IFN 3 million units 3x/wk
- Pegylated IFN alfa 2b (1mg/kg/wk)
- Pegylated INF alfa 2a (180 mg/wk)
- 48 week treatment course regardless of genotype
in HIV patients - HCV treatment preceding HAART may decrease
antiretroviral related liver function
abnormalities - ARVs prior to HCV treatment when CD4 count is low
improves eventual response to HCV therapy
57Women of Child Bearing Age
- goals of treatment are the same as for other
adults and adolescents - Efavirenz should be avoided if
- desire for pregnancy
- Patient does not use effective and consistent
contraception. - For the woman who is pregnant, an additional goal
of therapy is prevention of mother-to-child
transmission (PMTCT) - goal of viral suppression to lt1,000 copies/mL
- Clinicians should consult the most current PHS
guidelines when designing a regimen for a
pregnant patient
58Conclusions
- Antiretroviral therapy improves clinical outcomes
in patients with HIV infection - Therapy success depends on patient adherence and
medication potency - Short- and Long-term drug toxicities should be
considered in treatment decisions - Monitoring of CD4 count and viral load allows for
early detection of virologic failure and
treatment changes as appropriate - Resistance testing is an important tool for
constructing antiretroviral regimens after
treatment failure
59CASES
60ARV Management Case
- 32y/o Asian MSM male last HIV test 4 yrs. ago
presents now newly diagnosed HIV with CD4 230
cells/mm3 and HIV-1 RNA of 824,000 copies/mL
repeated and confirmed in this range within 30
days of 1st visit. - Hepatitis C Neg, Hepatitis B surface antigen
with HBV DNA level of gt4.5 log10 copies/mL. - Family history of Diabetes, FBS is normal
61ARV Management Case
- Pt. c/o fatigue but no other sxs.
- Occasional THC and daily alcohol.
- Because of his work schedule he admits adhering
to AM meds will be troublesome with his rush to
get to work - He agrees though to begin CART but fears
lipodystrophy signs he has seen in friends on ARV
therapy.
62ARV Management Case
- Which of the following regimens do you recommend?
- Tenofovir/emtricitabine FDC Efavirenz
- Abacavir/lamivudine Nevirapine
- Zidovudine/lamivudine FDC lopinavir/ritonavir
63ARV Management Case
- At week 12, patient admits cocaine use on
weekends and non-compliance with ARV. Drug and
ETOH counseling begins - At week 28, VL is 3124 copies/mL and CD4 is 355
cells/mm3. - HBV has declined to 2 log10 copies/mL (original
4.5 log10) - A genotype is ordered
64ARV Management Case
- Genotype test reveals
- RTI mutation K65R, L100I, K103N, and M184V.
65ARV Management Case
- The treatment team considers his extensive drug
and adherence counseling to be fairly successful,
and you decide to change his regimen without
further delay.
66Which of the following new regimens do you
recommend?
- Zidovudine/lamivudine/abacavir fosamprenavir
- Tenofovir/emtricitabine Zidovudine
atazanavir/ritonavir - Tenofovir stavudine lopinavir/ritonavir
67ARV Management Case
- The patient feels well but has scleral icterus
- Bilirubin level is 6.6 mg/dL his indirect
bilirubin level is 6.1 mg/dL - You reassure the patient that this is only a
cosmetic problem, and he agrees to wait and see
if it resolves. - After 16 weeks the icterus is somewhat better.
Indirect bilirubin is 4.8 mg/dL, - His boss is complaining about his appearance
because he has to interact with customers.
68ARV Management Case
- He has been frequently missing doses due to his
concern about his yellow eyes. - HIV-1 RNA viral load is 1200 copies/mL and his
CD4 cell count is 461 cells/mm3 - A genotype reveals
- same reverse transcriptase mutations
- protease mutation, N88S.
69Which of the following regimens do you recommend
now?
- Discontinue atazanavir continue
tenofovir/emtricitabine and zidovudine - Discontinue atazanavir continue
tenofovir/emtricitabine and zidovudine add
fosamprenavir/ritonavir - Discontinue atazanavir discontinue
tenofovir/emtricitabine continue zidovudine add
tenofovir add lopinavir/ritonavir
70Case Summary
- Choose regimens addressing the patients schedule
and concerns - Once daily dosing when possible
- Combination therapy for hepatitis B is likely to
be more effective, although not yet proven - Resistance testing at regimen failure to guide
future regimen selection.