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Managing Acute Antiretroviral Complications. Constance A. Benson, MD. CA Benson, MD. Presented at IAS –USA /RWCA Clinical Conference, August 2004. The International AIDS Society–USA. Systemic Hypersensitivity Reactions.
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Managing Acute Antiretroviral Complications Constance A. Benson, MD CA Benson, MD.Presented at IAS–USA/RWCA Clinical Conference, August 2004. The International AIDS Society–USA
Systemic Hypersensitivity Reactions • The most common antiretroviral drugs associated with systemic hypersensitivity/skin rash reactions are: • NNRTIs • NVP 15-17% • DLV 18% • EFV 10% • PI • Amprenavir 15-20% • NRTIs • Abacavir 3-5%
Abacavir Hypersensitivity • Incidence: 3-5% • Symptoms: • Onset 4-6 wks after initiation of abacavir therapy • Fever, skin rash, fatigue, GI symptoms (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain), and respiratory tract symptoms (pharyngitis, dyspnea, or cough) • Management: • Discontinue abacavir • Do not re-start abacavir; severe symptoms will recur within hours, including life-threatening hypotension and death
Abacavir Hypersensitivity • Association with HLA-B*5701, HLA-DR7, and HLA-DQ3 (Mallal S, et al., Lancet 2002) • HLA-B*5701 - 78% of patients with abacavir hypersensitivity vs. 2% of abacavir tolerant pts (OR 117; 95% CI 29-481; p<0.0001) • Combination of HLA-DR7 and HLA-DQ3: 72% of hypersensitive patients vs. 3% of abacavir tolerant pts (OR 73 [20-268]; p<0.0001) • Combination of HLA-B*5701, HLA-DR7 and HLA-DQ3: 72% of hypersensitive pts vs. none without (OR 822 [43-15,675]; p<0.0001) • Positive predictive value 100%; negative predictive value 97%
Abacavir Hypersensitivity • Association with HLA type (Hetherington S, et al., Lancet 2002) HLA White Black Pts Controls Pts Controls B-57 55% 3% 22% 6% B*5701 55% 1% 0 0 B*5701/DR7 33% 1% N/A N/A
Acute Hepatotoxicity • Nearly all currently available ARV drugs have been associated with hepatotoxic reactions • NRTIs non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and hepatic steatosis; longer term exposure (> 6 months) • NNRTIs first 3-12 weeks after starting therapy; often associated with other systemic symptoms of hypersensitivity • PIs first 3-12 weeks after starting therapy, mild to moderate in severity; increased risk in those with underlying HBV, HCV • Unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia with indinavir, atazanavir – not a toxic reaction
Antiretroviral Therapy and Hepatotoxicity • Liver enzyme elevations are common in patients initiating ART • Any elevation 30-50% • Severe elevations 10-15% • Some ARVs may predispose to liver enzyme elevations • Ritonavir, Nevirapine • Chronic viral hepatitis increases the risk of liver enzyme elevations (range 2.5-8 fold) • Reports of rapid HCV disease progression or acute “flares” of chronic hepatitis B or C after initiation of ART
Hepatic Steatosis • Mild to moderate liver enlargement due to fat accumulation • Diagnosed by U/S, CT, or MRI • Multifactorial: • Macrovesicular: alcohol, diabetes, obesity, protein-calorie malnutrition, total parenteral nutrition • Drugs: Vitamin A, steroids, synthetic estrogens or androgenic steroids • Microvesicular: Reye’s syndrome, acute fatty liver of pregnancy, drugs • Treatment: Remove cause, avoid alcohol
Stavudine and Didanosine During Pregnancy • Dear Health Care Provider letter (1/5/01): • 3 deaths in pregnant women receiving d4T and ddI; each received both drugs throughout pregnancy (other drugs were atazanavir, nelfinavir, and nevirapine in one each) • 2 infant deaths – one in utero, and the second after emergency C-section • Boxed warning: • “…The combination of ddI and d4T should be used with caution during pregnancy and is recommended only in the potential benefit outweighs potential risk.”
Acute Nevirapine Hepatotoxicity • Nevirapine hepatotoxicity • Incidence 8-18% in clinical trials; 2.5-11% symptomatic hepatitis – generally occurs in first 4-18 weeks of treatment • Fulminant hepatic failure < 1% • Reported in HIV-seronegative HCWs receiving NVP for post-exposure prophylaxis and pregnant women receiving ddI, d4T (MMWR; 2001) • Factors associated with increased risk: • Chronic hepatitis due to HBV, HCV • Women with CD4+ T cell counts > 250 cells/L (11.9% vs 0.9%)
Acute Hepatotoxicity: Management • Mild to moderate (transaminases < 3-5x ULN): • May continue therapy, supportive care, close observation • If transaminase levels increase to > 5x ULN (or > 3-5x pre-treatment values) or if other symptoms develop or progress, therapy should be held • Severe (transaminases > 5x ULN): • Stop therapy • Re-challenge: • Depends on the severity of the reaction, presence of underlying liver disease or need to use other hepatotoxic drugs, and the availability of alternative ARV drugs
Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome • Syndrome characterized by an acute systemic inflammatory response following start of potent ART • Signs and symptoms may be clinically indistinguishable from underlying OIs • MAC, TB most common • Also seen with CMV, chronic HCV or HBV, HSV, VZV • Occurs 4-16 weeks after initiation of potent ART • More common in those with baseline CD4+ counts < 100 cells/µL; large (> 100 cells/µL) on potent ART
CNS Side Effects of Efavirenz • Reported incidence 7 - 25% • Range from dizziness to hallucinations, including vivid dreams/nightmares, insomnia, restlessness, irritability, disorientation, depression, suicidal ideation • May be more common in those with underlying psychiatric disorders or substance use/abuse • Onset with initial dosing; mild to moderate in severity, subside over 4-6 weeks with continuation of drug • 4-10% unable to continue on treatment because of severity and persistence of symptoms.
Efavirenz Metabolism Is Reduced in African Americans: ACTG 5095/5097s • Plasma EFV levels measured from 190 patients treated with EFV-based regimens • 53% white, 32% black, 15% Hispanic • EFV metabolism was increased by 32% in whites compared to the other two groups • Trend favored increased rates of early EFV discontinuation in those with reduced EFV metabolism/clearance Ribaudo H, et al. 11th CROI, 2004
Efavirenz Metabolism as a Function of CYP2B6 Polymorphisms (ACTG 5128) • Efavirenz is metabolized by CYP2B6 • CYP2B6 is a mixed function oxidase with several SNP-associated functional polymorphisms • Homozygous G516T mutation (T/T) is associated with reduced clearance • T/T found in 20% of blacks and 3% of whites. • T/T mutation may partially explain reduced clearance and increased CNS side effects among blacks Haas D, et al., 11th CROI, 2004
CNS Side Effects of Efavirenz • Management issues: • Avoid simultaneous administration of efavirenz (or other NNRTIs) and abacavir if possible • Difficulty distinguishing abacavir hypersensitivity from NNRTI hypersensitivity • Reduced doses untested but may be the focus of TDM evaluation • Splitting efavirenz doses unsuccessful
Acute Lactic Acidosis • Venous lactate level > 2 mmol/L (18 mg/dL) and arterial blood pH < 7.3 • 1.3 cases/1000 person-yrs exposure to NRTIs • Onset acute or subacute, usually within 1-4 months • d4T >> ddI >> ZDV > 3TC, ABC, TDF • Obesity, female sex • Symptoms: Fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain, dyspnea • Liver enzyme elevations (3-5 x pre-Rx levels); hepatic steatosis • Diagnosis: Clinical symptoms + venous lactate level (proper sampling critical)
Symptomatic Hyperlactatemia • Symptoms • Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, distention, elevated AST/ALT • Clinical Course (Lonergan et al., 2001) • 31/33 pts on d4T-based therapy • Mean time to normalization of lactate 49 days • 17 pts re-challenged with NRTIs; 16/17 substituted ZDV or ABC for d4T, 12/12 re-started 3TC • No recurrence of increased lactate after 6 months of follow-up
Management of Hyperlactatemia and Lactic Acidosis • Stop all therapy • Withhold treatment until lactate level near normal • Re-initiate treatment with agents less likely to be associated with mitchondrial toxicity if possible • d4T > ddI > ZDV > 3TC, ABV, TDF • Possible but untested treatment interventions: • L-acetyl-carnitine • Ubiquinone (Co-enzyme Q10) • Vitamin B12 (riboflavin) • Vitamin B1 (thiamine) • Antioxidants (Vitamin C, E)
Other Acute Adverse Effects of Antiretroviral Drugs • Zidovudine – nausea, headache, anemia, neutropenia • Didanosine – nausea, diarrhea, pancreatitis • Indinavir – acute interstitial nephritis, nephrolithiasis, retinoid effects (dry skin, alopecia, paronychia) • Ritonavir – nausea, vomiting, circumoral paresthesia • PIs (nelfinavir > ritonavir > saquinavir > indinavir > lopinavir/ritonavir) – diarrhea, gastrointestinal upset • Adjunct Rx with anti-emetics, anti-diarrheal agents • Drug discontinuation results in rapid reversal for most