Dr. Amaj Saeed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Dr. Amaj Saeed

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Title: Slide 1 Author: University of Nottingham Last modified by: Amanj Created Date: 10/13/2004 8:56:20 AM Document presentation format: 35mm Slides – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dr. Amaj Saeed


1
Clinical aspects of HIV
  • Dr. Amaj Saeed
  • MB.CH.B MSc PhD
  • Clinical virologist
  • amanj.saeed_at_krg.org

2
HIV global impact
  • 4th commonest cause of death
  • 34.5 x 106 infections worldwide
  • 24.5 x 106 in sub-Saharan Africa
  • 33 15 year olds infected in some African
    countries
  • ? impact on social, civil and economic stability

3
HIV transmission
  • Sexually - heterosexual - same sex
  • Vertically - in utero - during delivery
    (15-40) - breast milk (20)
  • Contaminated - IV drug misuse needles -
    needle stick injuries
  • Blood products - transfusion/tissues
  • factor VIII

4
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5
  • HIV initially infect CD4 lymphocytes,
    macrophages and dendritic cells.
  • HIV can infect macrophages.
  • As the disease progress B lymphocyte function are
    affected through their regulation by CD4 Th
    cells

6
  • The destruction of the CD4 helper cell subset is
    particularly damaging to overall orchestrated
    immune response leads to appearance of
    opportunistic infection.

7
  • Mild influenza like illness (incubation time of
    about 3-4 weeks)
  • Vigorous immune response resulting in dramatic
    fall of virus until the virus reach a set point
    (stage B).
  • 60 of asymptomatic cases move in to AIDS related
    complex in the next 4 years
  • fever
  • Weight loss.
  • Persistent lymphadenopathy
  • Night sweats
  • Diarrhoea
  • the most important factor is gradual loss of CD
    T cells

8
  • Patients then proceed to full-blown AIDS (stage
    C)
  • Thrush
  • Herpes zoster
  • Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
  • Death may occur if untreated (70)

9
AIDS-defining conditions
  • Candidiasis of bronchi, trachea or lungs
  • Candidiasis, oesophageal
  • Cervical carcinoma, invasive
  • Coccidioidomycocis, disseminated or
    extrapulmonary
  • Cryptococcosis, extrapulmonary
  • Cryptosporidiosis, chronic intestinal (1-month
    duration)
  • Cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease (other than liver,
    spleen or nodes)
  • CMV retinitis (with loss of vision)
  • Encephalopathy, HIV-related
  • Herpes simplex, chronic ulcers (1-month
    duration) or bronchitis, pneumonitis or
    oesophagitis
  • Histoplasmosis, disseminated or extrapulmonary
  • Isosporiasis chronic intestinal (1-month
    durations)
  • Kaposis sarcoma

10
AIDS-defining conditions
  • Lymphoma, Burkitts
  • Lymphoma, immunoblastic (or equivalent term)
  • Lymphoma (primary) of brain
  • Mycobacterium avium complex or M. kansasii,
    disseminated or extrapulmonary
  • Mycobacterium tubereculosis, any site
  • Mycobacterium, other species or unidentified
    species, disseminated or extrapulmonary
  • Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
  • Pneumonia, recurrent
  • Progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy
  • Salmonella septicaemia, recurrent
  • Toxoplasmosis of brain
  • Wasting syndrome, due to HIV

11
Initial management of HIV
  • establish diagnosis
  • - HIV antibody present (ELISA, Western blot)-
    determine VL (HIV RNA assays bDNA,
    RT-PCR, NASBA)
  • determine past exposure to OI
  • - hepatitis A, B, C- CMV- toxoplasmosis
  • exclude other active infection
  • - syphilis, other STI- cervical cytology
  • immune status
  • - CD4/CD8 lymphocyte counts

12
HIV-poor prognostic determinants
  • low CD4 count
  • high VL - gt 10,000 copies/ml
  • gt 35 years
  • low BMI (weight (kg) / height (m)2)
  • coinfection CMV
  • complicating systemic infections
  • complicating malignancies eg. Lymphoma

13
HIV infection complications
  • mucocutaneous
  • respiratory
  • gastrointestinal
  • neurological
  • eye (retina)
  • haematological

14
Major HIV-associated pathogens
  • Bacteria
  • Salmonella spp
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • M. avium-intracellulare
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • Haemophilus influenzae
  • Moraxella catarrhalis
  • Rhodococcus equii
  • Bartonella quintana
  • Nocardia
  • Viruses
  • Cytomegalovirus
  • Herpes simplex
  • Varicella zoster
  • Human papillomavirus
  • Papovavirus

15
Major HIV-associated pathogens
  • Fungi and yeasts
  • Pneumocystis carinii
  • Cryptococcus neoformans
  • Candida spp
  • Dermatophytes (Trichophyton)
  • Aspergillus fumigatus
  • Histoplasma capsulatum
  • Coccidioides immitis
  • Protozoa
  • Toxoplasma gondii
  • Cryptosporidium parvum
  • Microsporidia spp
  • Leishmania donovani
  • Isospora belli

16
HIV prevention of infectious complications
  • avoid exposure
  • food
  • protected sex
  • CMV blood products
  • immunization
  • hepatitis A B
  • chemoprophylaxis

17
HIV Lifecycle and Antivirals
Entry inhibtors
18
Antiretroviral drugs
  • NRTI Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
    (nucleoside analogues NA)
  • abacavir, didanosine, lamivudine, stavudine,
    zalcitabine, zidovudine
  • NNRTI Non-nucleoside RTIs
  • efavirenz, nevirapine
  • Protease inhibitors (PIs)
  • amprenavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir,
    saquinavir, lopinavir
  • ( combined with ritonavir boosted)
  • Fusion inhibitors
  • enfuvirtide (T-20)

19
HIV treatment regimens (HAART)
  • A) NRTI x 2 NNRTI
  • OR
  • B) NRTI x 2 PI (boosted)

20
HAART regimens
  • (A) zidovudine lamivudine
  • efavirenz OR nevirapine
  • (B) zidovudine lamivudine
  • lopinavir/ritonavir (kaletra)
  • OR
  • atozanavir/ritonavir
  • OR
  • indinavir/ritonavir
  • OR
  • amprenavir/ritonavir

21
Complications of HIV therapy
  • lipodystrophy
  • increased fat deposits (abdomen, breast, buffalo
    hump)
  • ? lipids, cholesterol and glucose
  • mitochondrial toxicity
  • ? lactic acid
  • immune reconstitution
  • flare in host response to OIeg. CMV, M.
    tuberculosis, HBV, VZ

22
HIV therapy special situations
  • pregnancy
  • avoid vertical transmission (AZT, combination
    therapy)
  • newborn
  • treat vertical infection (AZT, combination
    therapy)
  • post-exposure prophylaxis
  • needle stick injuries in HCW (AZT, 3TC,
    indinavir)
  • acute seroconversion illness
  • HAART

23
HIV vaccines
  • Chemically inactivated whole virus vaccine (in
    effective)
  • Recombinant DNA technology (expression of HIV env
    protein)
  • Live attenuated HIV vaccine is under
    investigation (nef gene has been mutated)
  • Prime boost approach
  • HIV env gene has been cloned in to harmless pox
    virus (canary pox), injection to the arm and
    subsequent replication of the pox virus DNA
    containing the HIV env gene prime the immune
    system, this will be followed by injection of
    recombinant env protein.
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