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The danger Numero Uno

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Dr. Bharti Last modified by: GSPH Created Date: 2/27/2006 2:00:46 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company: B.D.C Research Center – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The danger Numero Uno


1
The danger Numero Uno
2
Thats how it reaches you
  • Unprotected sexual intercourse
  • Intravenous drug abuse and shared needles
  • From a HIV positive mother to her infant during
    breastfeeding

3
No ,Not this way
4
I am no less
  • World Population is six billion
  • Two billion have me
  • The Tubercle Bacilli.

5
(No Transcript)
6
Transmission and Pathogenesis
  • Prospective cohort studies have documented high
    rates of TB (5-10 per year) among HIV infected
    populations, particularly injection drug users.
    Exogenous re infection with another strain of M.
    tuberculosis has been documented in patients with
    advanced HIV disease.

7
  • The risk of TB has been estimated to be over 9
    times greater in HIV positive compared with HIV
    negative persons who have a positive tuberculin
    test.
  • Outbreaks of TB, including multi-drug resistant
    disease, have highlighted the speed with which
    HIV infected patients progress to active TB after
    recent infection with M. tuberculosis.

8
Double Trouble
HIV alters the pathogenesis and clinical
presentation of TB. The frequency of extra
pulmonary TB increases with low Cd4 (70 with
less than 100 count) The clinical and
radiographic presentation may be atypical.
9
TB and HIV
  • HIV positive patients with TB have a
    significantly higher mortality when compared to
    HIV negative cases.
  • Delays in the diagnosis of TB have been
    associated with worse outcomes, so initiation of
    treatment as soon as TB is suspected is very
    important.

10
TB and HIV
  • While initial studies emphasized the impact of
    HIV on the natural progression of TB, recent
    studies have demonstrated that TB may alter the
    natural history of HIV disease.
  • Viral load has been shown to increase in the
    setting of active TB and decrease with
    appropriate therapy. Furthermore, HIV patients
    with TB have been shown to die sooner and develop
    AIDS faster than HIV-1-infected controls without
    TB.

11
When to Suspect
  • All patients should be questioned regarding
  • close contact with a person who has MDR TB
  • previous residence in a country where
    drug-resistant TB is common
  • previous treatment for TB, especially if it was
    incomplete
  • previous residence in an institution (e.g.
    prison, homeless shelter) with documented
    transmission of a drug-resistant strain of TB.

12
Mantoux Screening
  • Tuberculin skin testing should be done using the
    Mantoux method in all HIV patients.
  • A tuberculin reaction of gt 5 mm of indurations
    is classified as positive in persons known to
    have or suspected of having HIV infection.

13
Mantoux Screening
  • Unfortunately, as the CD4 lymphocyte count
    declines with progression of HIV , many patients
    no longer react to delayed-type hypersensitivity
    testing.
  • More than 60 of persons with CD4 lymphocyte
    counts of lt 200 cells/µl may have skin test
    reactions of lt 5 mm.
  • Thus, it is impossible to detect the presence of
    tuberculosis infection in many HIV.

14
Anergy Testing
  • In the past, anergy testing has been used to try
    to distinguish false negative from true negative
    tuberculin reactions.
  • However, recent data have documented limitations
    in the usefulness of anergy testing in public
    health tuberculosis screening programs.
  • Therefore, anergy testing in conjunction with
    tuberculin skin testing is no longer recommended
    for inclusion in screening programs for M.
    tuberculosis infection among HIV infected
    persons.

15
Evaluation
  • All patients who have a positive tuberculin skin
    test should have a chest radiograph performed to
    rule out active disease.
  • Patients should be asked about any symptoms
    which suggest the presence of active TB.
  • Persons who are found to have an abnormal chest
    radiograph and/or are symptomatic should be
    evaluated for the possibility of active disease
    by sending three sputum specimens for AFB smear
    and culture.

16
TB and HIV
  • Patients with advanced HIV-1 disease are more
    likely to have an extrapulmonary site involved
    and atypical radiographic presentation such as
    lower lobe involvement and intrathoracic
    adenopathy. It is important to note that HIV-1
    infected patients with pulmonary TB may have a
    normal chest radiograph.

17
Lymphadenopathy
18
Large right paratracheal lymphadenopathy
19
Bilateral diffuse small nodules
20
Radiological Picture
21
Radiological Picture
22
Bilateral diffuse opacities with hilar adenopathy
23
Post Primary disease
24
Treating TB
  • HIV infected patients with TB respond well to
    ATT, as long as the regimen contains INH and
    rifampin.
  • A 6-month regimen consisting of INH, rifampin,
    pyrazinamide, and either ethambutol or
    streptomycin given for 2 months followed by INH
    and rifampin for 4 months is the preferred
    treatment for drug-susceptible organisms.
  • Pyrazinamide should be continued for the first 2
    months regardless of the results of
    drug-susceptibility testing, whereas ethambutol
    can be stopped after drug susceptibility test
    results indicate that M. tuberculosis is
    sensitive to INH and rifampin.

25
Treatment of TB (Contd.)
  • Because the effect of patient adherence on the
    outcome is much more critical, directly observed
    therapy (DOT) is strongly recommended for persons
    with HIV infection.
  • ATT should be supplemented with pyridoxine (B6).
  • Patients should be monitored closely for adverse
    reactions

26
ARV and ATT
  • Ask HIV infected about antiretroviral therapy
    use and specifically whether they are currently
    taking protease inhibitors (PIs) or
    non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
    (NNRTIs).
  • CD4 lymphocyte count and viral load should be
    measured to assist with the treatment of the
    underlying HIV infection.

27
Paradoxical Reaction
  • Occasionally, patients with TB may experience a
    temporary exacerbation of symptoms after
    beginning TB treatment.
  • This is known as a paradoxical reaction (or
    immune reconstitution syndrome) These reactions
    are often related to the simultaneous
    administration of both ARV and ATTs.

28
Paradoxical reaction-diagnosis
  • The diagnosis of a paradoxical reaction should be
    made only after a thorough evaluation has been
    made to exclude other etiologies.
  • Some patients have required the use of
    corticosteroids (in addition to TB treatment) to
    treat these reactions.
  • The decision to use corticosteroids must be made
    on a case-by-case basis.
  • Indications may include severe hypoxemia, airway
    obstruction, neurologic impairment, or possibly
    enlarged painful lymph nodes.

29
Monitoring Response to Treatment
  • Because the margin of error for treatment failure
    and relapse is probably less in HIV, the 6-month
    regimen should be considered the minimum duration
    of treatment.

30
Monitoring Response to Treatment
  • Patients having a delayed response to treatment
    should have treatment prolonged from 6 to 9
    months.
  • Malabsorption of the ATT drugs should be
    considered as a possible cause of treatment
    failure or the acquisition of drug resistance,
    particularly if gastrointestinal symptoms or
    chronic diarrhea is present.

31
Treatment of TB in Patients with CD-4
countlt100/µL
  • They should NOT be treated with once- or
    twice-weekly regimens.
  • These patients should receive daily therapy
    during the first 2 months, and then daily or
    three-times weekly therapy during the next 4
    months.
  • This recommendation is based on a recent study
    showing an increased rate of acquired rifamycin
    resistance among patients who received
    twice-weekly therapy.
  • All patients with advanced AIDS and TB should be
    treated by DOT.

32
TB Treatment Antiretroviral Treatment
  • Potent antiretroviral agents are now available
    for the treatment of HIV infection. These agents
    are classified as nucleoside/nucleotide
    (NRTI/NtRTI) or nonnucleoside reverse
    transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) , protease
    inhibitors (PI)and Fusion inhibitors.
  • The nucleoside agents do not have clinically
    significant drug interactions with the standard
    antituberculosis medications.
  • However, the PIs and NNRTIs may inhibit or induce
    cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes (CYP450) and thus,
    these drugs may alter the serum concentration of
    the rifamycins.

33
ATT and ARV
  • The rifamycins induce CYP450 and may
    substantially decrease blood levels of the
    antiretroviral drugs resulting in the potential
    development of resistance to these important
    agents.
  • The potential benefit of the antiretroviral
    drugs must be weighed against the importance of
    rifamycins in treating HIV related tuberculosis.
  • The loss of a rifamycin from the treatment
    regimen is likely to delay sputum conversion,
    prolong the duration of therapy, and possibly
    result in a poorer outcome

34
ATT and ARV
  • Previous guidelines specifically stated that
    rifampin was contraindicated for patients who
    were taking any PI or NNRTI.
  • New data indicate that rifampin can be used for
    the treatment of tuberculosis in several
    situations

35
ATT and ARV
  • Other issues in the guidelines to be aware of
    are
  • the rifabutin dose should be reduced to 150 mg
    two or three times per week when given with
    ritonavir
  • The dose of rifabutin should be increased to 450
    mg or 600 mg daily or 600 mg two or three times
    per week when rifabutin is used concurrently with
    efavirenz
  • Rifabutin can be used with many protease
    inhibitors, but doses of both the protease
    inhibitors and rifabutin may need to be altered.

36
ATT and ARV
  • In some patients, use of ATT regimens containing
    no rifamycins may be considered.
  • For such patients, a 9-month, largely
    intermittent, regimen consisting of isoniazid,
    streptomycin, pyrazinamide and ethambutol for 2
    months then isoniazid, streptomycin, and
    pyrazinamide for 7 months is an option.

37
Treatment of Latent TB Infection
  • Treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI)
    with isoniazid (INH) is very effective in
    preventing persons infected with M. tuberculosis
    from developing tuberculosis, regardless of
    HIV.Rifampin and pyrazinamide is not recommended
    for reasons of heptotoxicity
  • Recent studies have also documented no
    significant reduction in TB among anergic
    individuals who took INH.
  • HIV persons should be treated for LTBI if they
    have a tuberculin skin test gt 5 mm and have not
    previously received treatment for LTBI.

38
Treatment of LTBI
  • In certain cases, treatment of LTBI in persons
    who are not tuberculin positive may also be
    considered. Such therapy may be beneficial for
  • close contact to an infectious case
  • persons with a history of prior untreated or
    inadequately treated TB who have fibro nodular
    opacities on a chest radiograph (if active TB is
    ruled out)
  • HIV infected adults who reside or work in
    institutions and are continually and unavoidably
    exposed to patients who have infectious TB

39
Treatment of LTBI
  • The current CDC recommendations include several
    options for treatment of LTBI in HIV-1-infected
    persons
  • INH (300 mg/day) for 9 months, either daily or
    twice-weekly (900 mg biw)
  • Therapy should be supplemented with pyridoxine
    (25-50 mg a day) to help prevent peripheral
    neuropathy
  • rifampin daily for 4 months. Rifabutin may be
    substituted for rifampin
  • When treatment is provided with isoniazid twice a
    week, the therapy should be given under direct
    observation. delavirdine cannot be given with
    either rifampin or rifabutin.

40
Thank You
  • Dr.Rakesh Bharti,MD,
  • rakeshbharti1_at_rediffmail.com
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