HIV Flashcards

1
Q

Origins of AIDS epidemic

A
  • entered humans from chimps before 1930 in east central Africa
    1996- HAART began with good outcomes
    2003- global rollout of antiretrovirals

2014: 36.9 million adults/kids living with HIV–most in sub-saharan Africa (25.8 million) with South Africa having the highest prevalence
- more prevalent in certain subgroups in US

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2
Q

Markes of HIV dz

A
  • CD4 lymphocyte count: as they are main host cell; correlates with disease progression
  • Plasma HIV RNA level– measure of extent of ongoing replication in lymphoid tissue; copies per ml blood

want to see undetectable viral load–suggests minimal replication rate and low potential for developing resistance to drugs

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3
Q

How does HIV get into CD4 cell

A
  • uses CD4 receptor and co-receptor, either CCR5 or CXCR4
  • no current drug inhibiting CD4 binding but one in research
  • have medication blocking CCR5 receptor. Virus mutates to use CXCR4 and are resistant to CCR5 blockers

Steps:

1) CD4 binding
2) gp120 conformational change and co-receptor binding
3) gp41 conformational change/fusion

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4
Q

CCR5 delta-32 mutation

A

natural polymorphism with 32 bp deletion in CCR5 gene– frame shift and protein truncation so that CCR5 not expressed on cell surface; relatively resistant to HIV or have more benign clinical course

Allele Distribution: seems to be most common in Caucasians both worldwide and in N America/Europe

~1% homozygosity in Caucasians

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5
Q

Primary HIV infection

A
  • often associated with acute febrile illness, mono-like with or without aseptic meningitis
  • usually 2-3 weeks after HIV exposure
  • occurs in >50% pts but often unrecognized–maybe think just another viral illness
  • if untreated, CD4 count is depleted; think about 1/3 or more new infections in acute period when ppl don’t know they are infected but have HUGE viral load

Signs/Sxs:
- fever, fatigue, maculopapular rash, myalgia, headache, pharyngitis, cervical nodes, arthralgia, oral ulcers, odynophagia, weight loss, diarrhea, oral candidiasis, photophobia

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6
Q

Risk of transmission

A

varies during infection course; Acute “early” pts perhaps responsible for lots of transmission

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7
Q

Natural Hx of HIV infection

A

acute illness, then if untreated CD4 count will drop, making you more likely to get certain opportunistic infections which occur at certain CD4 counts

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8
Q

Opportunistic infection

A
  • infection that takes advantage of weakened immune system to cause an illness; see with HIV, chemo, glucocorticoid therapy
  • many of these happen when CD4 low
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9
Q

Pneumocystic Pneumonia

A

(PCP) opportunistic infection;

diffuse infiltrate in lungs

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10
Q

Opportunistic infections in HIV

A
  • Kaposi sarcoma– interaction between HIV and HHV-8; reddish-purple vascular tumors
  • PCP
  • Oral thrush
  • CMV retinitis –infiltrate and hemorrhage around fovea– CD4 count
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11
Q

Targets for antiretroviral therapy

A

Entry inhibitors (target fusion or CCR5)
Reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI-nucleosides/nucleotides– and NNRTIs)
- Integrase inhibitors
- Protease Inhibitors

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12
Q

Effects of Antiretroviral Therapy

A

Virologic/immunologic effect:

  • potent inhibition of viral replication
  • Early HIV: prevent immunologic deterioration
  • Advanced HIV: allows immunologic recovery

Clinical effect:

  • prevent opportunistic infections/improve existing ones
  • reduce hospitalization, long term care facility use, meds for OIs, and cost
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13
Q

Factors contributing to HIV evolution

A
  • genetic diversity (introduction of mutations–especially since RT is error prone)
  • fast replication rate
  • selective pressures (genetic bottle necks)
  • A population of viruses exists in single infected person– “quasispecies”–genetically distinct viral variants evolve from initial virus inoculum
  • variants due to error prone nature of viral replication
  • quasispecies more closely related to each other than to virus in other infected persons

IMPORTANT TO ADHERE TO THERAPY TO AVOID RESISTANCE!

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14
Q

expected response to antiretroviral therapy

A
  • reduce HIV-1 RNA, ideally to undetectable levels-if doesn’t happen in 1st month expect drug resistance or non-adherence
  • increase CD4 lymphocyte count (may or may not happen in 1st month)
  • improved existing opportunistic complications
  • decreased morbidity/mortality
  • reduced HIV transmission (sexually and to infants)
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15
Q

Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis

A

(PrEP)

  • HIV negative person takes combination of HIV medications to prevent acquisition of HIV infection
  • increased risk of HIV acquisition–maybe in relationship with HIV+, IV drug user, MSM, risky behavior
  • take 2 drugs: tenofovir-emtricitabline
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16
Q

Key points

A
  • HIV introduced into humans in 20th century
  • mainly causes disease via CD4 T-lymphocyte produced immunodeficiency
  • virus can cause acute mono-like illness at onset; most subsequent illnesses related to malignancies/opportunistic infections
  • antiretroviral agents block viral entry, RT, integration, or maturation of virions. Need 3 drug combo to fully inhibit/prevent resistance. ART also prevents transmission
  • Pts on ART have potential yo live normal lifespan