Title: Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
1Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care and some other useful tests
- Matthew Williams
- UK CAB
2Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care and some other useful tests
3Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- Viral load
- Resistance
- Therapeutic drug monitoring
4Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- Blood test
- Used to judge how far HIV disease has advanced
- Helps predict the risk of opportunistic
infections - Most useful when it is compared with the count
obtained from an earlier test.
5Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- CD4 dips on HIV infection from a normal count of
500-1,500 cells in a cubic millimeter (mm3) of
blood (a drop, more or less), recovers somewhat,
then falls over time down to as low as 0.
6Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- CD4 lt200 greater risk of opportunistic
infections (OIs) AIDS threshold for
prophylaxis eg for PCP bottom of UK threshold
for starting combination therapy - CD4 lt50 very great risk of OIs
7Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- CD4 over 350 treatment not recommended
- CD4 any count treatment recommended if
symptomatic - BHIVA, Treatment of HIV-infected adults with
antiretroviral therapy (2006)
8Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- CD4 count lower in pregnancy temporary drop of
50 cells/mm3
9Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- CD4 count
- CD4 - CD4 cells as proportion of all lymphocytes
(white blood cells), normally about 40 in adults - CD4 is used to monitor babies and children who
have higher CD4 counts
10Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Viral load
- Blood test (can be other serum eg CSF)
- Used to judge whether treatment is working (early
infection?) - Helps predict the risk of disease progression?
- Most useful when it is compared with the count
obtained from an earlier test.
11Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Viral load
- After infection, viral load surges to a very high
for the first weeks or months - Often 1,000,000 copies in a millilitre (mL) of
blood, when you are very infectious - Viral load falls as the body controls HIV
infection then rises over time as immunity is
damaged
12Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Viral load
- When you are on HIV treatment, your viral load
should be reduced to undetectable lt50
copies/mL 1.7 log10
13Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Viral load
- Blip 1 viral load test detectable (over 50
copies) 2 of these may be a trend and indicate
virological failure
14Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Viral load
- Viral load is usually a PCR (polymerase chain
reaction) quantitative (counting) test for HIV
RNA - research tests can measure viral load below
50 copies - Other tests bDNA (branched DNA), NASBA (nucleic
acid sequence based amplification)
15Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Resistance test
- Blood test (can be other serum eg CSF)
- Used to judge whether treatment will work
- Involves interpretation
- Two types genotype and phenotype
- Viral load needs to be over 500 copies/mL for the
test to work
16Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
Resistance test
17Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Resistance test
- Genotype looks at genetic make up of HIV viruses
in infection and compares this to what is known
about which mutations lead to resistance - Phenotype looks at whether the drugs work in a
test tube
18Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Resistance test
- Minority species of resistant virus may be missed
by conventional resistance testing (ie if less
than 10 of your virus is resistant the test may
not pick this up). - In patients without evidence of transmitted
resistance, a suboptimal virological response to
first-line therapy (lt1 log10 copies/mL drop in
viral load by 48 weeks) should prompt resistance
testing at that time. - BHIVA, Treatment of HIV-infected adults with
antiretroviral therapy (2006)
19Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
20Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)
- Measures drug levels in the blood - requires
blood samples at recorded time intervals after a
drug dose - Practical uses for NNRTIs and PIs
21Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)
- Freely available at low (45/drug) or no cost (if
covered by drug company) from University of
Liverpool Department of Pharmacology. - http//www.hiv-druginteractions.org/
- http//www.delphicdiagnostics.com/
22Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)
- Drug levels vary much evidence of this
recommended dose is based on averages - University of Liverpool TDM audit 20-25 of
children on NNRTIs or PIs using drugs below
therapeutic level. - http//www.i-base.info/htb/v7/htb7-6/University.ht
ml
23Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care (BHIVA)
- All patients should have
- i) a resistance test at diagnosis,
- ii) before starting HAART,
- iii) if viral load does not drop by lt1log10
after 4-8 weeks after starting HAART, (genotype) - iv) after virological failure
24Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care
- BHIVA viral load before and 4-8 weeks after
starting treatment (as necessary thereafter)
25Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care
- BHIVA CD4 count before treatment (as necessary
thereafter)
26Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care
- BHIVA TDM for management of drug interactions,
pregnancy and paediatrics, highly
treatment-experienced patients when TDM and
resistance test results can be integrated, kidney
or liver impairment, transplant patients, drug
toxicity, alternative dosing where safety and
efficacy has not been established
27Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- UK standard of care and some other useful tests
28Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Kidney function
- Urine
- Albumin
- Bone density
- Glucose
- Platelets
- Red blood count
- White blood count
- Lipids
29Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- C-reactive protein
- DEXA scan
- Chest x-ray
- Sputum serology
- Lactic acid and blood pH
- Haemoglobin and iron
- Serum urea
- Creatine phosphokinase and lactate dehydrogenase
- Electrolytes
30Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Tests blood, blood and more blood...
- Many tests require a blood sample
31Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood glucose
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- Kidney function
- C-reactive protein
- Liver enzymes
- Anaemia
- Lactic acidosis
32Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood glucose
- Normal range 4-8 millimoles per litre (µmol/L)
- High glucose ? kidney disease, neuropathy,
insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease - Drugs PIs, tenofovir, AZT?
33Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) or "bad"
cholesterol, and high-density lipoproteins (HDLs)
or "good" cholesterol ratio is key measure - Insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome,
cardiovascular disease - Drugs PIs, AZT, efavirenz
34Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- Total cholesterol
- Target level under 5.2 µmol/L (4-6.4 µmol/L)
35Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- LDL cholesterol
- Target level under 3.4 µmol/L
36Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- HDL cholesterol
- Target level over 0.9 µmol/L
37Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- Cholesterol CV risk cannot be judged on
cholesterol levels alone, HDLLDL ratio,
lifestyle, BMI, age and other factors are
important - Smoking!
38Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood cholesterols and triglycerides
- Triglycerides
- Fasted levels lt2.2 µmol/L normal, 2.24.4 µmol/l
borderline, gt11 µmol/L very high - Each 1.1 µmol/L increased the risk of a heart
attack by about 25 in men and 60 in women
39Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Urine
- Dipstick test
- Protein kidney (tenofovir) ltlt mostly albumin
- Glucose insulin resistance (PIs), kidney
(tenofovir, indinavir?, atazanavir?) - Bilirubin liver ( X atazanavir)
- Sensitive but not specific
40Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Kidney function
- Urine dipstick test or blood test first test
and is indicative but inconclusive
41Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Kidney function
- Serum creatinine (blood, not very specific or
sensitive) - Creatinine clearance (blood and/or urine samples
over 24 hours) - Calculated creatinine clearance (1 blood sample)
also called estimated glomular filtration rate
(eGFR) - Creatinine clearance can increase in pregnancy
42Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Kidney function
- Different formulas to calculate GFR
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glomerular_filtration
_rate
43Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- C-reactive protein
- Risk of diabetes, hypertension and CV disease
- Low risk lt1mg/L
- High risk gt3mg/L
- Drugs PIs?, AZT?
- C-reactive protein is a plasma protein produced
by the liver (so, another blood test...)
44Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- C-reactive protein
- C-reactive protein is also marker of inflammation
from infection but seems to be a reliable marker
for CV disease in HIV regardless of HAART - http//gateway.nlm.nih.gov/MeetingAbstracts/102261
383.html
45Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- AST, ALT, ALP, GGT and bilirubin
- Many conditions, some specific indications,
complicated by hepatitis B and C coinfection,
pharmacological agents (all kinds) and food - Drugs ritonavir, nevirapine, efavirenz,
tipranavir, atazanavir, indinavir, d4T - most
ARVS and many other drugs may affect the liver
46Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- ALT (alanine aminotransferase)
- Normal range 7-30 units/L W, 10-55 units/L M
- May be more reliable sign of liver damage
47Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- AST (aspartate aminotransferase)
- Normal range 9-25 units/L W, 10-40 units/L M
- Unreliable sign of liver damage
- Pregnancy may decrease AST
48Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- ALP (alkaline phosphatase)
- Normal range 30-100 units/L W, 45-115 units/L M
- Non-specific sign of liver damage
- Atazanavir and indinavir can raise ALP
49Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- GGT (gamma glutamyl transferase)
- Normal range gt50 units/L W, gt65 units/L M
- Can be specific sign of liver damage
50Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Interpretation requires experience and the whole
picture - ALP GGT normal bone disease?
- ALP GGT bile ducts? liver damage?
- 10 x ALT/AST viral hepatitis? ARVs?
51Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Bilirubin
- Direct (unconjugated) 0-7 µmol/L
- Total 0-17 µmol/L
- Bilirubin levels slightly higher in males than
females, black Africans. - Drugs atazanavir, indinavir
52Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Bilirubin
- Jaundice clinically detectable at levels above 40
µmol/l. - Exception with atazanavir (or ritonavir) if
bilirubin levels around 60-70 µmol/l
53Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Bilirubin jaundice
- Other enzymes may show no outward sign
54Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Q what is the most liver-damaging
over-the-counter (OTC) medicine?
55Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- Q what is the most liver-damaging
over-the-counter (OTC) medicine? - A Paracetamol
56Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver enzymes
- WHO's top 10 liver-damaging medicines
- Paracetamol, troglitazone, valproic acid, d4T,
halothene, 3TC, ddI, amiodarone, nevirapine,
cotrimoxazole - The ABCs of liver disease, Edwin J Bernard, NAM
- http//www.aidsmap.com/files/file1000630.pdf
57Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver
- PT time Prothrombin Time
- Also called INR - International Normalized Ratio
- Evaluate the ability of blood to clot properly
- Not an enzyme test
58Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver
- PT time Prothrombin Time
- Monitor anti-coagulants?, bleeding disorders,
before surgery - Normal range 11-13.5 seconds
- 1.5-2 times normal too slow but no consensus on
calibration of test as marker of over-fast
clotting
59Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Liver
- PT time Prothrombin Time
- INR (Pt test / PT normal) ISI
- ISI International Sensitivity Index for tissue
factor (1-1.4)
60Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Anaemia
- Iron, B12, B6, folic acid, red blood count,
heamoglobin (HGB), mean corpuscular haemoglobin
(MCH), heamocrit (HCT), mean corpuscular volume
(MCV) - Drugs AZT (pregnant?)
61Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Anaemia
- Haemocrit
- Normal ranges 40-52 M 35-35 W
- Low haematocrit anaemia?
62Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Anaemia
- Haemoglobin
- Normal ranges 11.5- to 16.5g W 13-18g M per 100mL
blood - Low haemoglobin anaemia?
63Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Anaemia
- Mean corpuscular volume
- Larger anaemic, B6, B12, folic acid deficiency?
- Smaller anaemic, iron deficiency?
- AZT (and smoking) can increase MCV without
causing anaemia
64Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Anaemia
- Red blood count (total erythrocytes)
- Normal range 3.8-5 W 4.5-6.5 M billion per litre
or million per cubic millimitre of blood
(1012/L). - Low count anaemia? but not sensitive or
specific probably a first test
65Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- The rest...
- Blood chemistry
- http//www.aidsmeds.com/articles/CSTest_4730.shtml
- http//www.aidsmeds.com/articles/CBCTest_4729.shtm
l - A-Z tests
- http//www.aidsmap.com/cms1031936.asp
- http//www.labtestsonline.org.uk/
- Hepatitis C coinfection liver and diagnosis
- http//www.i-base.info/guides/hepc/livertests.html
- http//www.i-base.info/guides/hepc/hcvtesting.html
66Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Tests to avoid during pregnancy
- Amniocentesis
- Chorionic villus sampling
- Fetal scalp sampling
- Cordocentis
- Percutaneous umbilical cord sampling
- Internal fetal labour monitoring (external
ultrasound and fetal monitoring OK)
67Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Plebotomy (having blood taken)
- A cruel and unusual punishment - or nice chat
with the nurse?
68Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood count reference ranges
- Red blood count (RBC) 3.8 to 5 W 4.5-6.5 M
million per mm3 - White blood count (WBC) 4-11 per mm3
- Haemoglobin (HGB, Hg) 11.5-16.5 W 13-18 M g per
100mL - Neutropils 2-7.5 per mm3
- Lymphocytes 1.3-4 per mm3
- Platelets 150-440 per per mm3
- Mean corpuscular volume (MCV) 80-97
69Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Blood count reference ranges
- CD4 400-1,600 per mm3
- CD4 32-68
- CD8 140-1000 per mm3
- CD4CD8 ratio 0.9-6
70Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Sampling
- Biggest causes of odd results are sampling
error, processing error or sample
contamination - wrong tube, wrong person's sample,
cross-contamination, sample too hot/cold/old,
wrong reagent, wrongly set up equipment, not
reading instructions, misreading output...
71Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Results
- One result is rarely conclusive
- ANY unusual or unexpected results should ALWAYS
be retested before making a treatment decision - Normal is a difficult word tests refer to
reference ranges, can mean doctor/nurse is happy
with results even though high/low
72Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Sensitive v specific
- Sensitivity reacts positively
- Specificity reacts positively in right
circumstances
73Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Sensitive v specific
- Sensitivity rule in
- Sensitivity refers to the proportion of people
with disease who have a positive test result - Specificity rule out
- Specificity refers to the proportion of people
without disease who have a negative test result.
74Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Sensitive v specific
- SnNout when a sign, test or symptom has a high
Sensitivity, a Negative result rules out the
diagnosis. - SpPin when a sign, test or symptom has a high
Specificity, a Positive result rules in the
diagnosis.
75Tests and monitoring in HIV infection
- Sensitive v specific
- Many rapid tests are highly sensitive but not
specific enough to be definitive prone to
sample contamination - Urine dipstick tests
- Fingerprick tests