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Guidelines for Prevention and Treatment of Opportunistic Infections in HIV-Infected Adults and Adolescents Cryptosporidiosis Slide Set.
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Guidelines for Prevention and Treatment of Opportunistic Infections in HIV-Infected Adults and AdolescentsCryptosporidiosis Slide Set Prepared by the AETC National Resource Center based on recommendations from the CDC, National Institutes of Health, and HIV Medicine Association/Infectious Diseases Society of America
About This Presentation These slides were developed using recommendations published in May 2013. The intended audience is clinicians involved in the care of patients with HIV. Users are cautioned that, because of the rapidly changing field of HIV care, this information could become out of date quickly. Finally, it is intended that these slides be used as prepared, without changes in either content or attribution. Users are asked to honor this intent. -AETC National Resource Center http://www.aidsetc.org www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Epidemiology • Caused by Cryptosporidium species • Protozoan parasites • Infect small intestine mucosa; in immunosuppressed patients, also infect large intestine and other sites • Advanced immunosuppression (eg, CD4 <100 cells/µL) associated with prolonged, severe, or extraintestinal disease www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Epidemiology (2) • Infection results from ingestion of oocysts excreted in feces of infected humans or animals • Water supplies and recreational water sources (oocysts may withstand standard chlorination) • Person-to-person transmission common, via oral-anal contact, from infected children to adults (eg, during diapering), or care of patients with diarrhea www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Epidemiology (3) • Common cause of chronic diarrhea in AIDS patients in developing countries • In developed countries with low rates of envrionmental contamination and widespread use of effective ART, <1 case per 1,000 person-years in AIDS patients www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Clinical Manifestations • Acute or subacute onset of profuse watery, nonbloody diarrhea, often with nausea, vomiting, and abdominal cramping • Fever in 1/3 of patients • Can be very severe, especially with immune suppression • Malabsorption is common; dehydration, electrolyte abnormalities, malnutrition may result • Biliary tract and pancreatic duct may be infected, causing scleroding cholangitis and pancreatitis • Pulmonary infection is possible www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Diagnosis • Microscopic identification of oocysts in stool or tissue • DFA very sensitive, specific, is current gold standard for stool specimens • Acid-fast staining often used • PCR extremely sensitive • ELISA or immunochromatographic tests • Small intestine biopsy with identification of Cryptosporidium organisms www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Diagnosis (2) • Single specimen usually sufficient in profuse diarrhea • Repeat stool sampling is recommended in mild disease www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis: Prevention Preventing exposure • Avoid exposure to infected contacts • Contact with diarrhea • Potential oral exposure to feces during sex • Direct contact with farm animals, stool from pets • Scrupulous handwashing after potential contact with feces (eg, after diapering), after handling pets or other animals, gardening, before preparing food or eating, before and after sex www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis: Prevention(2) • Avoid exposure to contaminated water, food • Do not drink or swallow water from recreational sources (lakes, streams, pools) • Ice, fountain beverages, water fountains may be contaminated • Avoid raw oysters www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis: Prevention(3) • Boil tap water for ≥1 minute during outbreaks or when community advisory is issued • Submicron water filters or bottled water may reduce risk • For non-outbreak settings, data are inadequate to recommend that all persons with low CD4 counts avoid drinking tap water • Consider drinking only filtered water www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis: Prevention(4) Preventing disease • Primary prophylaxis: • Appropriate initiation of ART before severe immunosuppression should prevent disease • Rifabutin and possibly clarithromycin are protective, but data insufficient to recommend as chemoprophylaxis www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Treatment • Preferred strategies • ART with immune restoration (to CD4 count >100 cells/µL) • Usually results in complete resolution; should be offered as part of initial management of cryptosporidiosis • Symptomatic treatment: antidiarrheals • Tincture of opium may be more effective than loperamide • Octreotide usually not recommended (no more effective than other antidiarrheals) • Supportive care: aggressive hydration, electrolyte repletion, nutritional support (IV therapies may be needed) www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Treatment (2) • Alternative strategies • No consistently effective antimicrobial therapy in absence of ART • Consider nitazoxanide or other antiparasitic drugs in conjunction with ART, not instead of ART • Nitazoxanide 500-1,000 mg PO BID for 14 days + ART and other measures above • Some studies show clinical improvement with nitazoxanide • Paromomycin 500 mg PO QID for 14-21 days + ART and other measures above • Limited data; may improve clinical response in conjunction with ART www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Starting ART • ART should be offered as part of initial management of this infection • PIs inhibit Cryptosporidium in animal models – some experts prefer PI-based ART www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Monitoring and Adverse Events • Monitor closely for volume depletion, electrolyte loss, weight loss, and malnutrition • TPN may be indicated • IRIS not reported www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis: Treatment Failure • Supportive treatment • Optimization of ART www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Prevention of Recurrence • No effective prevention, other than immune restoration with ART www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Considerations in Pregnancy • Rehydration and ART initiation as with nonpregnant adults • Nitazoxanide not teratogenic in animals, but no data in pregnant humans • Use after 1st trimester in severely symptomatic women • Paromomycin: limited information on teratogenicity; minimal systemic absorption with PO administration • Use after 1st trimester in severely symptomaticwomen www.aidsetc.org
Cryptosporidiosis:Considerations in Pregnancy (2) • Loperamide: possible risk of hypospadias with 1st-trimester exposure • Avoid during 1st trimester, unless benefits expected to outweigh risks • Preferred antimotility agent during late pregnancy • Tincture of opium not recommended during late pregnancy • Opiate exposure during late pregnancy associated with neonatal respiratory depression; chronic exposure may result in neonatal withdrawal www.aidsetc.org
Websites to Access the Guidelines • http://www.aidsetc.org • http://aidsinfo.nih.gov www.aidsetc.org
About This Slide Set • This presentation was prepared by Susa Coffey, MD, and Oliver Bacon, MD, for the AETC National Resource Center in May 2013 • See the AETC NRC website for the most current version of this presentation: http://www.aidsetc.org www.aidsetc.org