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General Reference

Note: Rapidly changing field; identify local consultants and resources

Pathophys and Cause

Cause:Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 (Nejm 1991;324:308); rarely in US but commonly in Africa, HIV-2 (Ann IM 1993;118:211); a retrovirus

Pathophys:

AIDS defined by HIV infection and T4 count <200

Increased suppressor T8 and decreased helper T4 cells (CD4) (Nejm 1985;313:79); deficient production of interferon-gamma.gif (Nejm 1985;313:1504)

Billions of virons produced daily from infection w high viral RNA mutation rate, which allows rapid selection of resistant organisms in face of rx (Ann IM 1996;124:984)

Epidemiology

Spread via sex (3% infection rate w HIV-pos semen—JAMA 1995;273:854), but no heterosexual transmission when viral loads <1500/cc (Nejm 2000;342:921); contaminated needles; blood products, eg, screened blood transfusion 1996 risk = 1/500 000 (Nejm 1996;334:1685), factor VIII concentrates (Nejm 1993;329:1835), and breast milk (Jama 2000;283:1167; 1999;282:744); rarely by casual or nonsexual familial contact (Nejm 1987;317:1125), percutaneous inoculation in healthcare workers, 0.3%/incident, incr w incr volume and probably HIV titer (Nejm 1997;337:1485)

Prevalence in wives of infected hemophiliacs 12% (Ann IM 1991;115:764); 0.2% of Massachusetts women positive at delivery (Nejm 1988;318:525) and NY State but NY City rate = 14% (Am J Pub Hlth 1991;81:[May suppl]); 5% Baltimore ER patients (Nejm 1988;318:1645)

Transmission enhanced by the presence of chancroid or other genital ulcers (Ann IM 1993;119:1150)

Prevalence increased in gay males (67% in San Francisco 1984—Ann IM 1985;103:210), drug abusers, hemophiliacs (Nejm 1983;308:79), female partners of infected males (Nejm 1983;308:1181)

90% of persons transfused with HIV-positive blood convert to positive themselves (Ann IM 1990;113:733); but only 0.3% become positive after a needlestick from an HIV-positive patient; <0.5% of exposed healthcare workers convert over 1 yr (Nejm 1988;319:1118); 30% untreated babies of HIV-pos mothers are pos at 16 mo (Nejm 1992;327:1192)

Incidence of AIDS in 1990s decr in US as are AIDS deaths, probably from preventive maneuvers, drug rx of HIV infection, and prophylaxis and rx of opportunistic infections (Mmwr 1997;46:861). In US, 50k new cases yearly from 2003-6 (Jama 2008;300:520)

Signs and Symptoms

Sx:

Primary HIV infection (Nejm 1998;339:33; Ann IM 1996;125:259) consists of a mono-like syndrome 5-30 d after exposure lasting ~2 wk, rarely seek care; w fever (95%), sore throat (70%), wgt loss (70%), myalgias (60%), headache (60%), cervical adenopathy (50%), maculopapular or other rash involving trunk (40-80%)

AIDS: diarrhea (60%—Nejm 1993;329:14), malaise, weight loss, fever, adenopathy, dyspnea (pneumocystis pneumonia)

Si:

Early: lymphadenopathy; oral monilia/thrush (exudative, chelosis or erythematous diffuse rash types) precedes overt disease often (Nejm 1984;311:354), and multiple other oral manifestations (Ann IM 1996;125:487); dermatoses including warts and shingles; chronic fatigue syndrome

Later: wasting syndromes, chronic diarrhea, dementias/seizures, FUO, thrombocytopenia, cervical dysplasia, KS, hairy leukoplakia corrugations on sides of tongue due to reactivation of EB virus (Nejm 1985;313:1564)

Course

FIG 9.1 HIV Course

CRS.gif

Reproduced with permission from Pantaleo G, et al. Mechanisms of disease: the immunopathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus infection, New Eng J Med 1993;328:327-335. Copyright 1993 Mass. Medical Society, all rights reserved.

of HIV infection: variable RNA viral loads in 1st 4 mos but worse/faster crs predicted by levels at 5-18 mos from infection and by severity of primary infection sx (Ann IM 1998;128:613; Jama 1996;276:105); evolution to AIDS 10 yr post-seroconversion varies from 0-72%

of AIDS: mortality figures markedly improving w aggressive multidrug rx based on viral loads (Jama 2008;300:51), approaching survivals of uninfected populations for all age groups (Europe). Survival worse w increasing age of pt and some HLA MHC types (Nejm 2001;344;1668), but not associated w pre-rx CD4 and viral load values (Ann IM 2004;140:256), gender, iv drug use, race, or socioeconomic status (Nejm 1995;333:751). Survival improved when coinfection w GB virus C, a hepatitis C-like virus (Nejm 2004;350:981)

Complications

r/o HTLV I and II infections, former associated w paraparesis, latter w no disease (Ann IM 1993;118:448); rare idiopathic CD4 cell lymphopenia syndrome (Nejm 1993;328:429)

Lab and Xray

Lab:

Immunol:

Path:Bronchoscopic brushings and lavage are 85% specif and sens for specific infections (Ann IM 1985;102:747)

Urine:Proteinuria >0.5 gm/d in 50%, nephrotic syndrome in 10% (Ann IM 1984;101:429)

Treatment

Rx:

Preventive maneuvers:

Prophylaxis immediately (<24-48 h) (CDC prophylaxis/exposure guideline—Mmwr 1998;47[#RR-7]:1) postexposure × 1 mo w AZT (Nejm 1997;337:1485) 300 mg bid + lamivudine (3TC) (Ann IM 1998;128:306; Jama 1998;280:1769) 150 mg bid; may add indinavir 800 mg q 8 h or nelfinavir 750 mg tid if exposure substantial, or perhaps daily prophylaxis w retrovirals (Nejm 2010;363:2587, 2663) decr risk in gay men w constant exposure from 69% to 39%/year (MMWR 2011;60:65), or Tenofovir + emtricitabine (Truvada) w or w/o Kaletra (Nejm 2009;361:1768)

of pregnant women or breast feeding or of newborn, nevirapine po for 28 wk (Nejm 2010;362:2271, 2282, 2316)

Prevention of AIDS associated infections (Ann IM 2002;137:239; Nejm 2000;342:1416); can stop when CD4 counts >200 for >6 mo:

of questionable benefit:

of acute primary infection: triple-drug rx (Nejm 2005;353:1702)

of disease (Jama 2006;296:769, 827; 2004;292:251); rapidly changing field, should check most recent Med Let and other journal issues

Drug therapy (Antiviral Antibiotics) triplet+ for adults and children (Nejm 2001;345:1522) when CD4 count drops <350, at least by <200 or a little higher. Most start at 300± or if viral load >100 000 to get RNA load levels <50; both survival and other measures of disease severity are improved (Jama 2001;286:2560, 2568; 1998;280:1497) but must start at CD4 counts of <200 and adhere to rx (Ann IM 2003;139:810), starting w CD4 <350 is better. Women run lower viral loads, but prognosis same so maybe use CD4 <500 even if viral loads higher (Nejm 2001;344:720). Simultaneous initiation of triple rx results in >80% still adequately suppressed whereas w sequential initiation <40% suppressed at 2+ yr (Jama 1998;280:35); tapering to 1-2 drugs after 3-6 mos not as good as cont'd 3-drug rx (Nejm 2006;355:2283). Multiple-drug-resistant organisms appearing, >12% in US (Nejm 2002;347:385; Jama 1999;282:1135, 1142, 1177), so sensitivity testing necessary. Avoid combinations of d4T + AZT; or ddC w ddI, d4T, 3TC, and others (table—Jama 2004;292:259)

Triple-drug rx (table 4—Nejm 2005;353:1702) w:

Most common triple-drug combos:

  1. Zidovudine (AZT) bid + lamivudine (3TC) bid + efavirenz (Sustiva) qd (Nejm 2003;349:2293, 2304, 2351) or indinavir; or
  2. Tenofovir DF qd + emtricitabine qd, + efavirenz qd, perhaps best (Nejm 2006;354:251)

of aphthous stomatitis (Aphthous Stomatitis)

of lipodystrophy: perhaps rosiglitazone 4 mg po qd (Ann IM 2004;140:786), or metformin 2 gm po qd (Ann IM 2005;143:337)

of wasting syndrome (Palliative Care)

of diarrhea: rx primary cause if can be found; octreotide 50 mg sc q 8 h (Ann IM 1991;115:705), opiates, loperamide (Imodium), or diphenoxylate-atropine (Lomotil)