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HIV and TB CO-INFECTION

HIV and TB CO-INFECTION. Susan Swindells MBBS Nebraska AIDS Education & Training Center University of Nebraska Medical Center. Opportunistic Infections. Highest Priority Worldwide Tuberculosis. Andrew Speaker. Emergence of XDR TB. 17,690 isolates worldwide 2004-5, 20% MDR, 2% XDR

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HIV and TB CO-INFECTION

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  1. HIV and TB CO-INFECTION Susan Swindells MBBS Nebraska AIDS Education & Training Center University of Nebraska Medical Center

  2. Opportunistic Infections • Highest Priority Worldwide • Tuberculosis Andrew Speaker

  3. Emergence of XDR TB • 17,690 isolates worldwide 2004-5, 20% MDR, 2% XDR • Latvia- 19% of MDR TB cases • S. Korea- 15% of MDR TB cases • Latin America-6% of MDR TB cases • USA-4% MDR TB cases • Africa-<1% MDR TB cases • India? China?

  4. High Prevalence and Mortality from Extensively Drug-Resistant (XDR) TB in TB/HIV Coinfected Patients in Rural South Africa NR Gandhi, A Moll, R Pawinski, U Lalloo, AW Sturm, K Zeller, J Andrews, G Friedland Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven CT USA Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, Durban, South Africa Philanjalo, Tugela Ferry, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa

  5. Results 1539 Patients with Isolates sent 995 (65%) Culture-Negative 544 (35%) Culture-Positive for M.tb 221 (41%) Resistant to INH and RIF (MDR TB) 128 cases of MDR TB in US in 2004 53 (24% of MDR, 10% Culture-Positive) Resistant to all tested drugs (XDR TB) 347 cases XDR TB worldwide

  6. Survival from Sputum Collection

  7. Mortality • 52 of 53 (98%) XDR TB patients died • Median survival from sputum collection 16 days (range 2-210 days) • 2 healthcare workers died with confirmed XDR TB • 4 other workers died with suspected XDR TB • 64% of patients hospitalized for any cause before onset of XDR TB • 26/30 (87%) XDR TB isolates genetically similar • 86% HIV-infected

  8. Evolution of the extensive drug resistant (XDR) KZN strain of M.TB in KwaZulu-Natal • Majority of patients infected with the same KZN strain • Databases 1994 to 2005 searched for resistance patterns in isolates of M.TB with KZN strain fingerprint. • In 1994, KZN strain cases with MDR TB, with some STM resistance • From 1994, MDR isolates found with resistance to additional drugs • First XDR isolate in 2001 • Resistance to up to 7 drugs developed in a decade. Courtesy of G. Friedland

  9. Survival by level of resistance NonDR=57 MDR=52 XDR=61 1= non-MDR 2 = MDR 3 = 4/5 XDR 4 = 6 XDR Courtesy of G. Friedland

  10. Tuberculosis and HIV Disease and TB Drug Resistance-A Perfect Storm • Enormous cost of worldwide neglect of TB • Lack of resources, basic research, modern diagnostics and new treatments • Estimated $20 billion needed in next decade • Areas of high TB and HIV prevalence particularly vulnerable • Failing TB programs • Poverty/crowding/migration • Primitive infection control • Lack of interaction with HIV programs

  11. XDR TB: High Research Priority • Global XDR TB Task Force met Oct ’06 • Revised case definition: • Occurrence of TB with isolates resistant to INH and RIF plus any fluroquinolone and at least one of three injectable 2nd-line drugs (amikacin, kanamycin, capreomycin) MMWR Nov 3, 006/55(43);1176

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  13. Interaction of HIV & TB • Lifetime risk of disease with MTB infection: 10-20% • Annual risk with HIV co-infection 10% • Leading cause of death with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa • Occurs at all CD4 levels • Risk of TB increases soon after HIV infection • Incidence doubled in 1st year after infection in SA gold miners [Sonnenberg et al; JID 2005] • Reinfection and reactivation

  14. Unanswered questions in Management of HIV/TB co-infection • When to start ART • What to start • Optimal diagnostic tests • Role of INH prophylaxis • How to prevent drug resistant TB • IRIS issues • Pregnancy • Drug-drug interactions

  15. 0 - 24 25 - 49 50 - 99 100 - 299 300 or more No estimate Estimated TB incidence rates, 2004 Estimated new TB cases (all forms) per 100 000 population The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement.  WHO 2005. All rights reserved

  16. A global view of HIV infection 38.6 million people [33.4‒46.0 million] living with HIV, 2005 2.4

  17. 0 - 4 5 - 19 20 - 49 50 or more No estimate Estimated HIV prevalence in new adult TB cases HIV prevalence in TB cases, 15-49 years (%) The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement.  WHO 2005. All rights reserved

  18. TB in patients receiving ART New Pulmonary TB NEW TB ANTIRETROVIRRAL THERAPY 2 6 48 96 0 MONTH ON ARV Undiagnosed TB Treatment failure Recurence Reinfection Activation of latent TB Transmitted TB IRIS Courtesy of F. Scano, WHO

  19. TB Skin Testing • ≥ 5 mm positive in HIV-infected • 55% HIV+ pts in sub-Saharan Africa TST+ • Can be read after 2 -7 days • [personal communication R.Chaisson]

  20. TB Diagnosis • WHO strategy using sputum smears misses half of incident cases at 1st presentation • Misses extra-pulmonary disease • 5% detection in children • HIV-infected pts more likely smear-negative • Multiple visits and months of delay common • Lack of standardized diagnostic tests to in/exclude TB in ART clinical trials/rollout programs

  21. Smear negative TB in PLHIV • Higher chance for smear negative disease • SN pulmonary = 24 – 61% • Extrapulmonary = 4 – 40% • Autopsy studies = 14 – 54% • Scale of problem is underestimated • Studies are institution based • Most TB services look for smear positives • Early death before diagnosis is established Getahun H et al Lancet 2007 DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)60284-0

  22. Key changes in the new policy • Vigilance and flexibility to start empiric treatment for suspected extrapulmonary TB in peripheral health facilities • TB care should include HIV care • HIV staging (clinical , immunological) • PCP treatment • Co-trimoxazole preventive therapy • Clinical management of extrapulmonary TB be included as TB control programme activity • Recording and reporting of SN TB improved

  23. Sign/symptom Cough ≥ 3 weeks BMI ≤ 18 Night sweats Fever ≥ 1 month Weight loss Lymphadenopathy Sensitivity 76% 67% 63% 59% 58% 37% Clinical Predictors of Active TB in Rural Uganda (n=1995) Sensitivity and specificity improved with 1 or more of: cough, fever, lymphadenopathy, BMI Were et al; CROI 2007 abstr# 848

  24. Role of DOTS • Directly Observed Treatment Short-Course • Public health based • Passive detection using sputum smear • Standardized regimens 6-8 months with DOT for at least first 2 • Targets: 70% detection, 85% cure

  25. FIND Product Deliverables 2006-2013 Liquid culture MTB & DST Speciation test Automated NAAT Reference Lab 10-40% % Access after 5 years Urinary NAAT Phage based resistance test LED Fluor Microscopy POC NAAT Peripheral Lab 70% Reader based LAT Flow Improved AG/AB strip test Urinary AG detection Clinic Health post 95% 2006 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2007

  26. Role of INH • CDC recommends for TST ≥ 5 mm • WHO recommends INH for all HIV+ in high prevalence countries • Most of Asia and Africa do not use: officially discouraged in S. Africa and India • Limited resources to screen for active disease • Concern about drug resistance

  27. INH preventive therapy (IPT) • IPT reduces risk of TB in HIV+ people • by 62% in PPD+ • By 36% overall • Evidence of survival benefit in children and in adults in cohort studies • Benefit of IPT may wane after 1-2 years in high prevalence settings

  28. Efficacy of IPT in HIV+ Adults: Risk of TB • 11 randomised trials with 8,130 HIV+ participants  overall reduction in TB = 36%, reduction PPD+ = 62% Woldehanna and Volmink, Cochrane Review 2006

  29. Treatment of Latent TB in HIV+ Patients and Survival in Brazil Pinho, AIDS 2001

  30. TB Preventive Therapy and Drug Resistance • Review of 13 IPT trials with ~35,000 participants shows low risk of selecting resistance (RR 1.45, 95% CI 0.85-2.47) • For INH-resistant LTBI, rifampin effective • For MDR or XDR exposure, no regimen has been shown to be effective • Drugs with potential utility: • Linezolid • Clofazimine • Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid Balcells et al. EID 2006;12:744; Nuermberger et al. AJRCCM 2005;172:1452

  31. MDR TB Treatment • Peru, Philippines & Eastern Europe cohort data • N = 729 • 70% success rate • Required individualized regimens with at least 4 drugs including 1 injectable + fluroquinolone • MDR-TB can be treated in resource poor countries (but not very poor ones) Nathanson et al; Emerg Inf Dis Sep 2006

  32. Discovery - 17 Preclinical - 4 Clinical Testing - 5 Cell Wall Inhibitors NIAID, Colorado State University Nitroimidazole Analogs Novartis Institute for Tropical Diseases, NIAID, TB Alliance Diamine SQ-109 Sequella Inc. Diarylquinoline R207910 Johnson & Johnson Dihydrolipoamide Acyltransferase Inhibitors NIAID, Cornell University Novel Antibiotic Class GlaxoSmithKline, TB Alliance Nitroimidazole PA-824 Chiron Corporation, TB Alliance Gatifloxacin OFLOTUB – TDR, Tuberculosis Research Centre, NIAID, TBRU Dipiperidines Sequella Inc. Picolinamide Imidazoles NIAID, TAACF) Synthase Inhibitor FAS20013 FASgen Inc. Moxifloxacin Bayer Pharmaceuticals, CDC TBTC, Johns Hopkins University, NIAID, TBRU InhA Inhibitors GlaxoSmithKline, TB Alliance Pleuromutilins GlaxoSmithKline, TB Alliance Translocase I Inhibitors Sequella Inc., Sankyo Proprietary Compound Otsuka Isocitrate Lyase Inhibitors (ICL) GlaxoSmithKline, TB Alliance Pyrroles (TB Alliance, Private Sector Partner) Pyrrole LL-3858 Lupin Limited Macrolides TB Alliance, University of Illinois at Chicago Quinolones KRICT/ Yonsei University, NIAID, TAACF, TB Alliance Methyltransferase inhibitors Anacor Pharmaceuticals Proprietary Compounds AstraZeneca Natural Products Exploration NIAID, TAACF, California State University, University of Auckland Thiolactomycin Analogs NIAID, NIH Nitrofuranylamides NIAID, University of Tennessee

  33. Role of Vaccines • Pre or post exposure vaccines could decrease disease/death • Use in combination with antibiotics?

  34. Role of ART: • WHO Guidelines 2006 for ART Initiation • Stage IV illness • TB ; serious bacterial infections if CD4 <350 • Before CD4 count falls to 200 • Start ART treatment 2 - 8 weeks after TB for active disease

  35. WHO Guidelines

  36. PreventionOptimal timing of ART initiation in those on TB treatment? EARLY DELAYED Increased disease progression and death IRIS Pill Burden Drug-drug interactions Toxicity Cost

  37. Cape Town cohort of 264 pts on ART and 770 not; 1992-2001[Badri Lancet 2002]

  38. Rifampin Interactions: Is dose adjustment required? • EFV and NVP are reduced 20-40% with rifampin1,2,3,4 • Small PK studies support dose increase of EFV (800 mg) and NVP(300 mg bid) 5,6 • Large interpatient variability due to genetic determinants of metabolism7 • Clinical outcome studies to date do not support dose adjustment of EFV or NVP 5 Lopez-Cortes, Clinical PK, 2002; 6Ramachandran, JAIDS, 2006; 7Haas, AIDS, 2004; Friedland J, Antimicrob. Chemotherapy 2006. 1Ribera, JAIDS, 2001; 2Lopez-Cortes, Clinical PK, 2002; 3Manosuthi, AIDS, 2005 ; 4Manosuthi,CID, 2006

  39. TB-IRIS: Incidence and Risk Factors Lawn et al; AIDS 2007

  40. TB-IRIS: Incidence and Risk Factors • Risk of IRIS high with low CD4 count and early treatment • Most cases self-limiting • Mortality rate low (1%) Lawn et al; AIDS 2007

  41. Conclusions • ART reduces TB risk, but not enough • Risk of selecting for resistance with IPT appears low • Active TB can be ruled out by clinical or laboratory screening in most patients • Need for improved diagnostics • Treatment of TB and HIV concurrently is complex

  42. TB Control in HIV-Endemic Areas Requires • Reassessment of traditional approaches to TB control (active vs passive case finding, DOTS) • Development of new tools and technologies • Increased drug availability and new drugs; shorter, simpler regimens • Vaccine? • Joint approaches with HIV-related programs • Earlier access to ART

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