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Acute HIV and the North Carolina STAT Project. Index. 20 yo white male July 29 Headache, fever Aug. 2 – Local ED Underwent LP Placed on Doxycycline … …possible Lyme Aug. 4 th presented to another Local ED and admitted Headache, fever, nausea, vomiting
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Index • 20 yo white male • July 29 Headache, fever • Aug. 2 – Local ED Underwent LP Placed on Doxycycline … …possible Lyme • Aug. 4th presented to another Local ED and admitted Headache, fever, nausea, vomiting labs: WBC 4.4; Plt 115; RMSF Ab, TRUST, HIV ELISA Ab- neg. Discharge Dx: Post- LP H/A Possible viral ( aseptic) meningitis
Transmission • Index symptoms resolve • Aug.15th-30th Index has sex with Partner A: 21 W male They have unprotected sex 3-4x Partner B : 22 W male joins for 3-way • Aug.30-Sept.9th Partner A&B have sex 1-2x/week
AHI Partners A&B • Sept.10th Partner A develops fever (104) x 7-10D fatigue, sore throat sees PMD given Z-pack and Vicodin • Sept.30th Partner B fever (101),sore throat,+/- rash Sees PMD given Z-pack
Transmission • Oct. 15th-20th Partners A&B have three way Partner C • Oct.28th – 30th Partner C Sore Throat, oral ulcers, thrush, fever • Oct.31st Partner C visits LMD requests STI W/U ; antib./ no HIV test • Nov.3rd Partner C Dx Lymphoma and requests HIV test • Nov. 15th HIV ELISA + WB Indet.
Transmission Index with AHI Transmission to A B Transmission to C C Dx AHI; And B come in for rapid testing on World AIDS Day
Acute HIV • The window period between: - Appearance of HIV in blood - Host Antibody response • Seroconversion defined as “confirmed” by + WB • Time period may narrow with newer generation ELISAs
Calculated transmission probabilities based on semen HIV viral load at peak (d23), set point (d120) Ranklog spVLProb/actOddsProb*/120d 75th %ile5.58 .038 1:26 .126 50th %ile 4.79 .009 1:107 .032 25th %ile 3.88 .0018 1:556 .006 • Assumes 8 coital acts per month • Pilcher CD, et al., XIVth Int AIDS Conf, 2002
Transmission of HIV/coital act Raki Wawer et al, JID 2005
Diagnostic Testing Timeline Symptoms p24 Antigen HIV RNA HIV ELISA 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Weeks Since Infection Recombinant peptide ELISA Viral lysate ELISA Fiebig et al, AIDS 2003;17(13):1871-9
Two-Fold Benefit of Detecting AHI • Individual Perspective • Improve prognosis with acute treatment???? • Entry into care and treatment • Public Health • Recognized previously missed infections • Avoid transmission to partners with risk reduction and ART • 10-100 fold increased transmission risk x 5 months • May be responsible for ½ all transmission of HIV - ID Transmission networks and geographic focus transmission networks partners at high risk targeted interventions identify high risk transmiitter
Pitfalls in AHI • Diagnosis rarely pursued/rare event • 30-40% of patients may be asymptomatic • Signs and symptoms non-specific • few clues • Laboratory testing must be directed
The acute retroviral syndrome • 49-89% symptomatic (Schacker TW, et al., AIM 1996 125:257-64) • Symptoms SchackerKinloch-de Loes Fever 93% 87% Fatigue 93 26 Pharyngitis 70 48 Weight loss 70 13 Myalgias 60 42 Headache 55 39
Primary (Acute) HIV:PE abnormalities • Erythematous non-specific rash • Lymphadenopathy • Mucocutaneous ulcerations (oral/vaginal/esophageal) • Pharyngitis • Neurologic abnormalities (including encephalitis) • Oral manifestations • Serious OI’s rare
Laboratory abnormalities • Lymphocytopenia • Other -cytopenias • Atypical lymphocytosis rare early • Elevated transaminases • Lymphocytic pleocytosis and elevated protein in CSF
Dx AHI • How • Considerations for which test - sensitivity -specificity - positive and negative predictive value - through put - cost
Ways to reduce transmission • Identify AHI • Behavior change….. Abstain during hyper-infectious period (8 wks) • HAART- to lower viral load ASAP • Screen for STI • Urgently trace partner network
North Carolina’s Perfect Storm • Named reporting • PCRS • Central Lab • Moderate prevalence • Integrated surveillance and field service • Integrated STD and HIV Branch • Close relationship UNC ID and UNC SPH
Our Approach to detection of AHI • Screening of all HIV Ab negative or WB indeterminate Blood from public clinics for HIV RNA • Review of all community cases - Ab neg., HIV RNA + - Ab.+ with Hx neg. HIV Ab within 3 mo - Ab + but with recent acute symptoms
False Positive Rates Problem with Individual Screening • p24 Antigen 0.2% • HIV RNA PCR 1-7%* *False positives <10,000 copies/ml HIV RNA
How to make AHI Screening Possible: Specimen pooling • Advantages Cost (Quinn, et al. AIDS 2000;14:2751-2757 ) Specificity Improved positive predictive value • Disadvantages Requires large testing volume Reduced sensitivity Logistics • STAT has provided proof of concept: Screening for AHI IS feasible in a routine testing population using ultrasensitive RT-PCR
A B C D E F G H I A B C D E F G H I 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 A B C D E F G H I A B C D E F G H I Pooling and resolution testing 90 individual specimens 9 intermediate pools (10 specimens) 1 master pool (90 specimens)
Clinical Reporting (2) EIA/WB + - NAAT Long Term HIV Positive + - F/U Testing (Ab+NAAT) + - HIV Negative Acute HIV
Antibody-negative HIV Infections as a Proportion of All Detected Cases 100% 90% 1% 6% 6% 6% 4% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% “Other” Overall Prenatal Low-risk HIV Test Drug Trt STD Clin Jail/Prison
The Future • Expand AHI screening in ERs, Urgent Care, and inpatient settings • Remove barriers for HIV testing in the above settings • Remove need for written informed consent ( not required by law) • Remove requirement for pre-test counseling • Limit post-test requirement to positives only • Develop predictive models for AHI screening and testing
Who is joining the party • Colorado • Baltimore STD clinics • FLA demonstration project • LA STD clinics • New York City • New York State – Rochester • San Francisco STD clinics • Seattle MSM and SEP
NC STD clinics and AHI • Entry point for high risk individuals • Overlap of incubation periods of classic STIs and HIV • Already drawing blood for syphilis • Opt out approach for HIV testing • Integration of HIV and STD programs
Rapid Testing “Plus”: Specimens • Fingerstick or oral fluid testing makes effective HIV antibody testing possible in non-traditional settings • most HIV testing is in traditional settings • Venous blood is routinely obtained for diagnostic tests at most HIV testing sites (STD clinics, prenatal clinics, SEP activities, etc) • Patients prefer non-venipuncture rapid tests…but “preference” does not mean mutually exclusive choices nor does it justify missing AHI
Conclusions • Continued exclusive use of HIV antibody tests will miss 4-10% of truly HIV+ individuals, at the precise moment of their maximum transmission potential • With emergent results notification and PCRS, acute HIV screening is direct HIV prevention • STAT has immediate impact on vertical HIV transmission • STAT is cost effective • Acute screening can be used to “back up” rapid tests
HCV Risk Factors Parenteral Sexual Perinatal IVDUMultiple partners High viral load Nasal cocaine Traumatic HIV (+) Transfusions HIV (+) Transplant Occupational exposure Tattoos/Body piercing Manicures Household items Toothbrush, razor HIV (+), positive for human immunodeficiency virus; IVDU, intravenous drug use. NIH Consensus Development Conference Statement. June 10-12, 2002; Bethesda, Md.
SEXUAL TRANSMISSION: RECOMMENDATIONS • Inform HCV carriers of risks • Test partner for HCV • No modification of long-standing monogamous relationships • Safer sex for promiscuous behavior • Some concern that genital ulcerative diseases ( LGV,HSV) may facilitate HCV tranmsission.
Factors Associated With Disease Progression • Alcohol consumption • 30 g/day in men • 20 g/day in women • Disease acquisition at >40 years • Male • HIV coinfection • Hepatitis B virus coinfection NIH Consensus Development Conference Statement. June 10-12, 2002; Bethesda, Md. Poynard et al. Lancet. 1997;349:825-832.
The co-infection dilemma • High co-infection rate of HCV in HIV infected • Few dually infected receive HCV therapy Why? • Administration of therapy • Historically poor response rates • Coverage of therapy cost • Dual and triple diagnosis • Liver Bx • Lack of experienced care providers
What to do • Raise awareness of the HCV epidemic • Cross train HIV providers in HCV management • Provide free screening for at risk populations - currently only 1 health department offers free HCV screening • Surveillance – both chronic and acute HCV - develop acute HCV screening ( variation of pooling mech.) - increase free screening • Expand coverage for HCV therapy • Vaccinate at risk populations for HAV and HBV • GET PROVIDERS to TREAT!
What to do is not solely dependent on therapy • Vaccinate for HAV and HBV • Council on reducing ETOH • Risk reduction for transmission