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Spotlight Case May 2008. Diagnosing HIV: It Doesn’t Take a Brain Surgeon. Source and Credits. This presentation is based on the May 2008 AHRQ WebM&M Spotlight Case See the full article at http://webmm.ahrq.gov CME credit is available
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Spotlight Case May 2008 Diagnosing HIV: It Doesn’t Take a Brain Surgeon
Source and Credits • This presentation is based on the May 2008 AHRQ WebM&M Spotlight Case • See the full article at http://webmm.ahrq.gov • CME credit is available • Commentary by: Roger Chou, MD, Oregon Health & Science University • Editor, AHRQ WebM&M: Robert Wachter, MD • Spotlight Editor: Niraj Sehgal, MD, MPH • Managing Editor: Erin Hartman, MS
Objectives At the conclusion of this educational activity, participants should be able to: • Describe the current epidemiology of HIV infection • Identify the risk factors for HIV infection • Indicate the challenges associated with HIV screening practices • Review current guidelines for HIV screening
Case: Diagnosing HIV A 41-year-old healthy man was admitted after one week of new onset headaches, and a witnessed generalized seizure. On examination, he was neurologically intact with stable vital signs, and the exam was otherwise unremarkable. Laboratory studies were notable for a mild leukopenia and anemia. Imaging revealed a 3 cm left-sided brain mass with surrounding edema.
Case: Diagnosing HIV (2) The radiologist reported the findings to be concerning for a malignant rather than infectious process. The patient was single, with no children, and had emigrated from Mexico 8 years earlier. He was started on steroids and transferred to a referral facility for neurosurgical biopsy and possible excision.
Case: Diagnosing HIV (3) Upon arrival to the referral facility, the patient remained neurologically stable and underwent left-sided craniotomy and brain biopsy. Unexpectedly, pathology revealed toxoplasma cysts, confirming a diagnosis of cerebral toxoplasmosis, for which therapy was initiated. This diagnosis prompted an HIV test that returned positive.
HIV Infection • Estimated to affect more than 1 millionin the United States • About ¼ of infected persons may be unaware of their infection status See Notes for references.
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome • Without treatment, median time from HIV seroconversion to developing AIDS is 8-11 years • Many persons with HIV infection not diagnosed until after an opportunistic infection, such as toxoplasmosis or pneumocystis • About ¼ of patients are simultaneously diagnosed with HIV and AIDS • About 40% of newly diagnosed meet criteria for AIDS within 1 year See Notes for references.
Most Common Risk Factors for HIV • In men • Male-to-male sexual contact (60%) • Injection drug use (16%) • Heterosexual contact with person known to have or be at high risk for HIV (17%) • In women • High-risk heterosexual contact (76%) • Injection drug use (21%) • Providers must take complete and targeted history to fully understand patient’s risk factors for HIV infection See Notes for references.
Risk Factor Assessment • Failure to take a thorough history, particularlyfor sensitive questions, may result in the failureto order an HIV test • Risk factor assessment is crucial because clinical diagnosis of acute HIV infection is challenging • Symptoms are short-lived, non-specific, and often atypical • Following resolution of acute HIV infection, patients often experience prolonged, relatively asymptomatic phase until they become severely immunocompromised See Notes for references.
Risk Factor Assessment (cont.) • Clinicians should view every health care encounter as potential opportunity to inquire about HIV risk factors • About 40% of persons reporting an HIV risk factor have never been tested • Even in settings with good access to health care, high-risk behaviors often remain undetected or fail to lead to testing • Important to test those who report risk factors, given high yield of testing in such persons • Another high-yield strategy is to routinely test persons evaluated in higher-prevalence settings See Notes for references.
Case (cont.): Diagnosing HIV The patient's clinical status deteriorated steadily following surgery. He developed worsening neurological status, required mechanical ventilation for airway protection, and developed a number of infectious complications that ultimately led to his death after a 5-week hospitalization.
Issues in Present Case • Difficult to know whether identifying HIV infection at time of admission would have led to a change in overall outcome • However, with described imaging findings, earlier knowledge of HIV infection could have led to immediate toxoplasmosis antibody testing, which may have prevented an unnecessary brain biopsy
Issues in Present Case (cont.) • Toxoplasmosis typically occurs only after the CD4 count has dropped below 100 cells/mm3 • Thus, there is a good chance patient had been infected with HIV for a decade or more • Although patient is described as previously healthy, he probably had previous encounters with the health care system following seroconversion See Notes for references.
Benefits of Screening for HIV • May identify infected persons at earlier stages of disease • May reduce morbidity and mortality by starting patients on appropriate therapies before they develop a serious infection or advanced immunodeficiency • May reduce secondary transmission, as persons aware of their HIV-positive serostatus may engage in fewer risky behaviors than those unaware of their status See Notes for references.
Challenges in Screening • No direct evidence showing benefits of routine screening or early identification of HIV infection on morbidity/mortality and transmission rates • Evidence of decreases in HIV-related morbidity and mortality are primarily from studies of patients with more advanced disease • Although screening asymptomatic patients with no identifiable risk factors would detect additional persons with HIV, the overall number of new infections identified would be limited See Notes for references.
Cost-effectiveness of Routine HIV Screening • When potential benefits from reduced secondary transmission are factored in: • Routine screening is cost-effective (<$50,000 per quality-adjusted life-year [QALY] gained) • Remains cost-effective even when prevalence of undiagnosed HIV was at or substantially below that in general population (~ 0.2%) • Without secondary transmission benefits: • Routine screening is not cost-effective (>$50,000 per QALY) in low-prevalence settings • Remains cost-effective in higher-prevalence (>1%) settings See Notes for references.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Guidelines • New CDC guidelines in 2006 • Recommends routine HIV screening for all persons 13 to 64 years • Unless prevalence of HIV in that setting documented to be <0.1% • Streamlined counseling using “opt-out” approach • Patients should be informed that HIV testing will be performed unless they decline (opt-out of) testing, without requiring specific signed consent for HIV testing • This opt-out approach is similar to recommendations for routine screening in the prenatal setting • By streamlining consent process and eliminating need for risk assessment, this recommendation is theoretically less burdensome on clinicians and easier to put into practice See Notes for references.
Opt-Out Testing • Studies that assess routine opt-out testing in low-risk and low-prevalence settings are not yet available • Even in higher-prevalence settings, substantial proportion of patients decline testing • Challenges • Need to insure that testing remains truly voluntary and informed, as well as confidential • Higher proportions of false-positives in low-prevalence settings • Continued stigmatization of persons with HIV infection • Current laws or policies in some states mandate specific informed consent or extensive pretest counseling See Notes for references.
US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) Recommendations • In low-risk, low-prevalence settings, USPSTF found that potential benefits of routine screening appear small relative to potential burdens/harms (labeling, anxiety, false-positives) • Strongly recommends for screening in persons reporting high-risk behaviors and in high-prevalence settings • Task Force does not recommend for or against routine screening See Notes for references.
Screening Pitfalls • HIV screening can take place during any health care encounter, including primary care, urgent or emergency care, and inpatient visits • 40%-60% of HIV-infected persons do not regularly see a provider outside of the emergency department • Studies of routine testing in urgent care centers found that up to ¼ of positive patients didn’t receive results • To realize maximum potential benefits of any HIV screening program, patients must be informed of test results and linked to appropriate follow-up care See Notes for references.
Take-Home Points • About ¼ of HIV-infected persons are unaware of status • A substantial proportion of HIV-infected persons are diagnosed late in the course of disease or when they present with an opportunistic infection • Patients with clinical presentations consistent with an HIV-related infection or cancer should be tested for HIV • Routine screening of patients could reduce the proportion of HIV-infected persons unaware of their status and potentially reduce secondary transmission, morbidity, and mortality
Take-Home Points (cont.) • Screening will have higher yield in persons reporting risk factors and in higher prevalence settings, but may be cost-effective even in very low prevalence settings if presumed secondary transmission benefits are factored in • Effective screening strategies require protocols for notifying patients of initial and confirmatory results and linking infected patients to HIV follow-up care