HIV - Treatment and Care Flashcards

1
Q

What to look for in a physical examination?

A

Kapusi’s sarcoma - purple-y vasculor tumours

Mucosal candidiasis - also check for painful swallowing which is associated with immunosupression

Pneumocystic pneumonitis

Syphilis

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2
Q

Name the targets for antiretroviral drugs

A
Reverse transcriptase
Integrase
Protease
Entry 
  - Fusion 
  - CCR5 receptor 
Maturation
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3
Q

Name the only drug that targets the host

A

CCR5 antagonist

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4
Q

Effectiveness of mono and dual therapy

A

Monotherapy - reduced viral load but not survival

Dual therapy - slightly better but not much. Useful to prolong survival only if patient is started on dual therapy directly, rather than adding to monotherapy.

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5
Q

Define highly active anti-retroviral therapy ***

A

a combination of 3 drugs from at least 2 drug classes to which the virus is susceptible

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6
Q

What is the purpose of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)

A

Reduce viral load to undetectable
Restore immunocompetence
Reduce morbidity and mortality

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7
Q

Preventing drug resistance

A

ADHERENCE (95%) - take medicines every day

Lifestyle - night shifts? regular meals?  
Tolerability
Pharmacokinetics
Drug-drug interactions
Treatment interruptions
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8
Q

How to manage treatment interruptions

A

Provide protease which is harder to get resistance to and allow some viral breakthrough as it is better than resistance

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9
Q

Factors to consider when choosing an anti retroviral

A
Tolerability
Low toxicity
Low pill burden
Low dosing frequency
Minimal drug-interactions
High barrier to resistance
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10
Q

List the effects of HAART toxicity in each system

A

GI side-effects (protease inhibitors)

Skin: rash, hypersensitivity, Stevens-Johnsons (abacavir, nevirapine)

CNS side-effects: mood, psychosis (efavirenz)

Renal toxicity: proximal renal tubulopathies (tenofovir, atazanavir)

Bone: osteomalacia (tenofovir)

CVS: increased MI risk (abacavir, lopinavir, maraviroc)

Haematology: anaemia (zidovudine)

GI: transaminitis, fulminant hepatitis (nevirapine, most others)

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11
Q

What is the only HAART drug licensed to be used in pregnant women?

A

Zidovudine

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12
Q

Drug-drug interactions in HAART therapy

A

Protease inhibitors are generally potent liver enzyme inhibitors
NNRTIs are generally potent liver enzyme inducers
Some drugs require pharmacological boosting (with potent liver enzyme inhibitors)

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13
Q

Is partner disclosure and notification mandated by law?

A

No. Voluntary process.

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14
Q

What are the different partner notification strategies

A

Partner referral
Provider referral
Conditional referral

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15
Q

Barriers to PN and disclosure

A

Fear

  • rejection
  • isolation
  • violence

Confidentiality

Stigma - leads to discrimination and/or ostracisation

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16
Q

What does prevention medicine encompass?

A
CVS risk
Smoking cessation
STI screening 
Hep A/B 
Flu vaccine
HPV vaccine 
Harm reduction
17
Q

Prevention of onward HIV transmission

A

Sexual transmission

  • Condom use
  • HIV treatment
  • STI screening and treatment
  • Sero-adaptive sexual behaviours
  • Disclosure
  • Post-exposure prophylaxis
  • Pre-exposure prophylaxis
18
Q

Sero - adaptive behaviour

A

If the HIV +ve partner is the inserting partner, the risk of transmission is greater rather than if he is the receiving partner

19
Q

STI and HIV transmission

A

HIV is more likely to take root in the presence of an STI rather than without it during intercourse with an HIV+ person

20
Q

Can HIV be transmitted through use of cutlery, kissing, bath towels or other casual/household contact?

A

No

21
Q

Conception options for HIV+ male and HIV - female

A

Treatment as prevention
(+/- timed condomless sex)
?HIV PrEP for female partner

22
Q

Conception options for HIV- male and HIV + female

A

Treatment as prevention
(+/- timed condomless sex)
? Self-insemination
?HIV PrEP for male partner

23
Q

Prevention of mother to child transmission

A
HAART during pregnancy
Vaginal delivery if undetected viral load
Caesarean section if detected viral load
4/52 PEP for neonate
Exclusive formula feeding
24
Q

List members of the MDT in HIV management

A
Physicians
Nurse specialists
Pharmacist
Patient co-ordinator
Secretaries
Virologists
Clinical psychologist
Social workers
Sexual health
25
Q

List the HIV prevention strategies that are effective on the individual level

A

Condom programmes
PEPSE
Behavioural change interventions (short term impact)
PrEP

26
Q

List the HIV prevention strategies that are effective on the community level

A

Needle exchange
Testing and treatment for STIs
Circumcision
Treatment as prevention

27
Q

PrEP eligibility criteria

A

Aged ≥ 16 and

HIV negative and

Can commit to 3/12’ly follow-up and

Willing to stop if eligibility criteria no longer apply and

Resident in Scotland

28
Q

Is the patient high risk for HIV?

A

HIV+ partner with detectable viral load or

MSM or transwoman
UPAI ≥ 2 partners in 12/12 and likely to do so again in next 3/12 or
Confirmed bacterial rectal STI in last 12/12 or

Other high risk factor agreed with another clinician