Современное лечение ВИЧ : лечение возрастных пациентов.2017/Contemporary Management of HIV. Management of Aging Patients.2017
In this downloadable slideset, Edgar Turner Overton, MD, and Program Director Joseph J. Eron, Jr., MD, review key data on managing aging patients with HIV.
Source: Contemporary Management of HIV
Date Posted: 4/24/2017
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Современное лечение ВИЧ : лечение возрастных пациентов.2017/Contemporary Management of HIV. Management of Aging Patients.2017
1. Contemporary Management of HIV:
Management of Aging Patients
This program is supported by an independent educational grant
from ViiV Healthcare.
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Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
About These Slides
3. Program Director and Core Faculty
Program Chair
Joseph J. Eron, Jr., MD
Professor of Medicine and
Epidemiology
University of North Carolina
School of Medicine
Director, AIDS Clinical Trials Unit
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Core Faculty
Edgar Turner Overton, MD
Associate Professor
Department of Medicine
Division of Infections Diseases
University of Alabama at
Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama
5. Decreased Life Expectancy in Older HIV-Positive
Adults in Modern ART Era
Population-based cohort study of survival in HIV-infected pts (n = 2440) and
uninfected controls matched by age and sex (n = 14,588) in Denmark
HIV-Negative
Controls
1996-2014
2006-2014
2000-2005
1996-1999
HIV-Positive Pts
1.00
0.75
0.50
0.25
0
ProbabilityofSurvival
50 60 70 80
Age (Yrs)
Legarth RA, et al. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2016;71:213-218. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
6. ATHENA: Older Pts Becoming More Prevalent in
the HIV-Infected Population
Observational cohort of
10,278 HIV-infected pts in the
Netherlands
Modeling study projections:
– Proportion of HIV-positive pts
≥ 50 yrs of age to increase
from 28% in 2010 to 73% in
2030
– Median age of HIV-positive
pts on combination ART to
increase from 43.9 yrs in
2010 to 56.6 yrs in 2030
Smit M, et al. Lancet Infect Dis. 2015;15:810-818.
ProportionofHIV-PositivePts
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
2010 2015 2020 20302025
> 70 yrs of age
60-70 yrs of age
50-60 yrs of age
40-50 yrs of age
30-40 yrs of age
< 30 yrs of age
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
7. AGEhIV: Older HIV-Infected Pts at Increased
Risk for Multiple Comorbidities
Cross-sectional analysis of comorbidity prevalence in prospective cohort study of HIV-infected
pts (n = 540) vs controls (n = 524) 45 yrs of age or older
Schouten J, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2014;59:1787-1797. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
0
20
40
60
80
100
45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 ≥ 65
Pts(%)
HIV Infected
45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 ≥ 65
HIV Uninfected
3+
2
1
0
Mean number of comorbidities
Number of participants
0.83
184
1.18
126
1.34
97
1.52
58
1.96
55
0.79
193
0.75
130
1.11
84
1.08
66
1.51
41
Age (Yrs)
Comorbidities, n
8. AGEhIV: Older HIV-Infected Pts at Increased
Risk for Multiple Comorbidities
Cross-sectional analysis of comorbidity prevalence in prospective cohort study of HIV-
infected pts (n = 540) vs controls (n = 524) ≥ 45 yrs of age
Schouten J. Clin Infect Dis. 2014;59:1787-1797.
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
Pts(%)
50
30
20
10
0
40
P < .001
P = .018 P = .008 P = .044
HIV-uninfected pts
HIV-infected pts
9. Factors Related to Non-AIDS Comorbidities in
HIV-Infected Pts
Warriner AH, et al. Infect Dis Clin North Am. 2014;28:457-476. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
AGING
Chronic HIV infection
ART toxicity
HCV and other coinfections
Genetics
Obesity, exercise, diet,
smoking
Inflammation and fibrosis
Dyslipidemia
Insulin resistance
Decreased physical functioning
Cardiovascular
Renal
Metabolic
Functional
Neuropsychiatric
Factors Conditions End Organ Disease
10. HIV and Inflammation
Hypothesis: HIV infection induces a persistent inflammatory
response, resulting in pathogenic responses and end-organ
disease
Elevated levels of inflammatory markers, including IL-6,
associated with increased risk of non-AIDS comorbidities and
mortality in HIV-infected pts[1-4]
ART partially reduces some inflammatory biomarker levels;
however, they may still remain elevated vs healthy HIV-
uninfected individuals[3,4]
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
1. Tenorio AR, et al. J Infect Dis. 2014;210:1248-1259. 2. So-Armah KA, et al. J Acquir Immune Defic
Syndr. 2016;72:206-213. 3. Nixon DE, et al. Curr Opin HIV AIDS. 2010;5:498-503. 4. Neuhaus J, et al.
J Infect Dis. 2010;201:1788-1795.
11. Inflammation Associated With Disease in
Treated HIV Infection
Mortality[1-4]
Cardiovascular disease[5]
Cancer[6]
Venous thromboembolism[7]
Type 2 diabetes[8]
Radiographic emphysema[9]
Renal disease[10]
Bacterial pneumonia[11]
Cognitive dysfunction[11]
Depression[13]
Functional impairment/frailty[14]
References in slidenotes. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
13. Case 1: Presentation
60-yr-old white man presents for care after HIV diagnosis
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
Characteristic Finding
HIV-1 RNA 42,000 copies/mL
CD4+ cell count 225 cells/mm3
HLA-B*5701 status Negative
Resistance/GT No mutations
Blood pressure 145/86 mm Hg
BMI 27.5
Lipid profile TC 196 mg/dL, LDL 125 mg/dL, HDL 25 mg/dL, TG 175 mg/dL
Renal markers Serum Cr 1.5 mg/dL eGFR 54 mL/min/1.73m2
Medications Hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg QD Simvastatin 10 mg QD
Other Does not exercise Smoker
14. 60-yr-old, ART-naive, HIV-infected man
Hypertension, hyperlipidemia, CKD, elevated CVD risk
Overweight, smoker
Comedications: hydrochlorothiazide, simvastatin
What is the most important intervention to
reduce cardiovascular disease risk for this pt?
A. Smoking cessation
B. Mediterranean diet initiation
C. Statin change
D. Daily aspirin initiation
E. ART initiation
Please respond using your mobile device 12345678910
15. CVD Mortality Higher in HIV-Infected Pts, Even
With Virologic Suppression
Analysis of CVD-related mortality in HIV-infected pts in New York City HIV
Surveillance Registry 2001-2012 (N = 145,845)
– 71% male; median age: 49 yrs
From 2001-2012, CVD mortality increased in HIV-infected pts (from 6% to 15%)
while decreasing in the general population
Age-adjusted rate of CVD mortality markedly decreased for HIV-infected pts
with virologic suppression
– HIV-1 RNA ≥ 400 copies/mL, 8.02/1000 PY
– HIV-1 RNA < 400 copies/mL, 3.99/1000 PY
– General population, 3.22/1000 PY
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comHanna DB, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2016;63:1122-1129.
16. Hypertension Is Increasing and More Prevalent
Among HIV-Infected Pts
Analysis of HTN in HIV-infected pts in
UNC CFAR HIV Clinical Cohort, 1996-
2013 (N = 3141)[1]
Hypertension incidence
– 1996: 1.68 cases/100 PY
– 2013: 5.35 cases/100 PY
Key risk factors
– Age – Obesity
– Diabetes – Renal insufficiency
– Nadir CD4+ cell count < 500 cells/mm3
Analysis of HTN in HIV-infected (n =
527) and HIV-uninfected (n = 517)
persons in AGEhIV cohort[2]
HTN rate higher among HIV-infected
vs HIV-uninfected persons
– 48% vs 36%; aOR: 1.65; 95% CI:
1.25-2.19
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
1. Okeke NL, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2016;63:242-248.
2. van Zoest RA, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2016;63:205-213.
17. 60-yr-old, ART-naive, HIV-infected man
HIV-1 RNA 42,000 copies/mL, CD4+ cell count 225 cells/mm3, HLA-B*5701 negative, WT virus
BP 145/86, BMI 27.5, TC 196 mg/dL, LDL 125 mg/dL, HDL 25 mg/dL, TG 175 mg/dL
Serum Cr 1.5 mg/dL, eGFR 54 mL/min/1.73m2
Comedications: hydrochlorothiazide, simvastatin
Which of the following ART regimens would you
recommend for the case pt?
A. DRV/RTV + FTC/TAF
B. DTG/ABC/3TC
C. DTG + FTC/TAF
D. EVG/COBI/FTC/TAF
E. RAL + FTC/TAF
F. Something else
Please respond using your mobile device 12345678910
18. START: Immediate vs Deferred ART by Age
Subgroup analysis of START, in which HIV-infected, ART-naive adults with CD4+ cell count
> 500 cells/mm3 randomized to immediate or deferred* ART (N = 4685)
Molina JM, et al. IAC 2016. Abstract THAB0201. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
*Until CD4+ cell count ≤ 350 cells/mm3, AIDS-related event, or event requiring ART.
Mos
Aged < 30 Yrs
PtsWithSeriousAIDSor
Non-AIDS–RelatedEvent(%)
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
600 12 24 36 48
2.6
1.3
Immediate ART
Deferred ART
Aged 30-49 Yrs
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
600 12 24 36 48
3.3
1.3
Aged ≥ 50 Yrs
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
600 12 24 36 48
11.7
2.9
19. DHHS HIV Guidelines: ART Considerations for
Older Pts
ART is recommended for all pts regardless of CD4+ cell count; especially important
for older pts due to
– Greater risk of serious non-AIDS complications
– Potentially a blunted immunologic response to ART
Adverse drug events from ART and concomitant drugs may occur more frequently
in older HIV-infected pts
– Bone, kidney, metabolic, cardiovascular, and liver health should be monitored closely
Polypharmacy is common in older HIV-infected pts
– Greater risk of drug–drug interactions
HIV experts should collaborate with primary care providers and other specialists to
optimize the medical care of older HIV-infected pts with complex comorbidities
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comDHHS Guidelines. July 2016.
20. DHHS: First-line Therapy Recommendations
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
Third Agent NRTI Backbone Daily Tablets
INSTI-Based Regimens
DTG ABC/3TC 1
DTG FTC/TAF or FTC/TDF 2
EVG/COBI FTC/TAF or FTC/TDF 1
RAL FTC/TAF or FTC/TDF 3
PI-Based Regimen
DRV/RTV FTC/TAF or FTC/TDF 3
DHHS Guidelines. July 2016.
21. DHHS: Considerations for Initial ART Based on
Age-Related Comorbidity
Scenario Consider Avoiding
Options for Consideration
Agent Caveat
CKD (eGFR
< 60 mL/min)
TDF, especially in
RTV-containing
regimens
TAF
ABC/3TC
DRV/RTV + RAL
LPV/RTV + 3TC
If eGFR > 30 mL/min
If HLA-B*5701 negative; 3TC requires dose
adjustment if CrCl < 50 mL/min
If TAF or ABC cannot be used; if HIV-1 RNA
< 100,000 copies/mL and CD4+ cell count
> 200 cells/mm3
If TAF or ABC cannot be used; 3TC dose
adjustment if CrCl < 50 mL/min
Osteoporosis TDF TAF
ABC/3TC If HLA-B*5701 negative
CVD risk ABC
Hyperlipidemia PI/RTV or PI/COBI
EVG/COBI
DTG
RAL
TDF more favorable lipid
effects vs ABC or TAF
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comDHHS Guidelines. July 2016.
22. What comedications most often require adjustment or
precipitate a change in ART for your older HIV-infected pts?
A. Antacids
B. Cardiac medications
C. Corticosteroids (inhaled or injection)
D. Diabetes medications
E. Lipid-lowering medications
F. Something else
Please respond using your mobile device 12345678910
23. ATHENA and Swiss HIV Cohort Studies:
Polypharmacy Among HIV-Infected Pts on ART
5.2% of pts 50-64 yrs of age and 14.2% of pts
≥ 65 yrs of age received ≥ 4 meds other than ART
Predicts that 20% of pts will be receiving
≥ 3 meds other than ART in 2030
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com1. Smit M, et al. Lancet Infect Dis. 2015;15:810-818. 2. Hasse B, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2011:53;1130-1139.
ATHENA Modeling Study[1]
16,000
14,000
12,000
10,000
8000
6000
4000
2000
0
People(n)
3+ comedications
2 comedications
1 comedication
No comedication
2010 2015 2020 2025 2030
Swiss HIV Cohort Study (N = 8444)[2]
Prospective Observational Study
< 50 Yrs 50-64 Yrs ≥ 65 Yrs
100
80
60
40
20
0
Participants(%)
n = 5761 n = 2233 n = 450
No comedication
1 comedication
2 comedication
3 comedications
4+ comedications
24. Key Interactions: INSTI-Containing ART
Regimens
Consider www.hiv-druginteractions.org to assist with identifying
potential interactions for all regimens
Regimen Key Drug–Drug Interaction Considerations
All INSTIs[1-5] Use caution with/avoid simultaneous polyvalent cation-containing
antacids
DTG/3TC/ABC[1]
DTG + FTC/TDF or FTC/TAF[2,6,7]
Dose adjust metformin (diabetes medication)
EVG/COBI/FTC/TDF[3,4]
EVG/COBI/FTC/TAF[4,5]
Avoid lovastatin, simvastatin (lipid-lowering agents), salmeterol
(asthma/COPD medication)
Avoid/use caution with inhaled, injected, or systemic steroids
RAL + FTC/TDF or FTC/TAF[6-8] No notable comedications to avoid for RAL aside from
aluminum/magnesium antacids
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comReferences in slidenotes.
25. Key Interactions: Boosted PI- or NNRTI-
Containing ART Regimens
Regimen Key Drug–Drug Interactions
ATV/RTV + FTC/TDF or
FTC/TAF[1-5]
DRV/RTV + FTC/TDF or
FTC/TAF[1,3-6]
Avoid lovastatin, simvastatin (lipid-lowering agents), salmeterol
(asthma/COPD medication)
Use caution with other lipid-lowering agents (eg, atorvastatin,
rosuvastatin, pravastatin)
Use caution with/avoid specific antiarrhythmics (eg, amiodarone)
Avoid PPIs (eg, omeprazole) with ATV
Use caution with/avoid inhaled, injected, or systemic steroids
RPV/FTC/TDF[7]
RPV/FTC/TAF[8]
Avoid PPIs (eg, omeprazole, pantoprazole), dexamethasone
EFV/FTC/TDF[1,9] No notable comedications to avoid for EFV; consider alternative
corticosteroid to dexamethasone
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comReferences in slidenotes.
26. Approach to Lipid-Lowering (Statin) Therapy
HIV-infected patients are at increased risk for ASCVD[1,2]
– ART can cause increases in triglycerides and total, VLDL, LDL, and HDL cholesterol
Prescribing statins can be challenging due to DDIs, insulin resistance, adverse events, and
increased pill burden[1]
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
Aspect of Statin Therapy Recommendation
Goal of therapy CVD risk reduction[1]
Screening
A fasting lipid panel should be obtained in all newly diagnosed HIV-infected pts[1,3]
Lipid screening annually[3]
Treatment
Statin therapy is first-line therapy for elevated LDL and non-HDL cholesterol[1]
Moderate- or high-intensity statin therapy should be considered[1]
Lifestyle therapy is the recommended first step[4]
Other Patient-provider discussion is central to decisions on drug treatment[1]
References in slidenotes.
27. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comDubé MP. Lipid management. 2015. p. 241-255.
PI- or COBI-Containing Regimens
High-Intensity Statin Moderate-Intensity Statin Low-Intensity Statin
Atorvastatin 20 mg Atorvastatin 10 mg Pravastatin 10-20 mg
Rosuvastatin 10-20 mg Rosuvastatin 5 mg Fluvastatin 20-40 mg
Pravastatin 40-80 mg* Pitavastatin 1 mg
Pitavastatin 2-4 mg
Simvastatin and lovastatin are contraindicated for pts receiving a PI or COBI
*With darunavir, reduce pravastatin to 20-40 mg
NNRTI-, RAL-, or DTG-Containing Regimens
High-Intensity Statin Moderate-Intensity Statin Low-Intensity Statin
Atorvastatin 40-80 mg Atorvastatin 10-20 mg Pravastatin 10-20 mg
Rosuvastatin 20 mg Rosuvastatin 10 mg Fluvastatin 20-40 mg
Pravastatin 40-80 mg Pitavastatin 1 mg
Pitavastatin 2-4 mg Lovastatin 20 mg
Lovastatin 40 mg Simvastatin 10 mg
Simvastatin 20-40 mg
Suggested Statins in the Setting of ART
All doses daily.
28. Case 1: Take-Home Points
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
Observation Recommendations
HIV-infected pts have
increased CVD risk
Virologic suppression can reduce CVD risk
Controlling other metabolic comorbidities (many of which occur more
frequently in HIV-infected pts) can also reduce the risk of CVD
• HTN, T2DM, CKD, lipid abnormalities
Lifestyle modification (exercise, diet, smoking cessation) may also
reduce risk
ART can increase dyslipidemia
Manage lipids with statin therapy; consider potential DDIs with PI- or
COBI-containing regimens
Numerous challenges exist in
treating HIV infection in aging
pts
Assess comorbidities and potential interplay with ART regimens
• Bone, lipid, or cardiovascular abnormalities can be exacerbated by
specific therapeutics
Consider polypharmacy and potential DDIs
29. Case 2: Aging Patient Developing
Comorbidities on ART
30. Case 2: Presentation
62-yr-old, HIV-infected white man returns for routine visit
Characteristic Finding
Current ART regimen/HIV status Stable suppression on EFV/FTC/TDF for 12 yrs; current HIV-1 RNA undetectable
CD4+ cell count 425 cells/mm3; nadir count 50 cells/mm3
Comorbidities Hypertension and hyperlipidemia, both controlled
Medications Hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg QD Simvastatin 10 mg QD
Vital signs Temp 98.6ºF; pulse 80 and regular, BP 130/76 mm Hg, RR 12
Weight 160 lbs (lost 10 lbs in last yr)
Other
Reports low energy and fatigue;
wants to sleep all the time
Denies depressed mood, easy
bruisability, hair loss
No fevers/chills/night sweats
No lymphadenopathy or edema
Normal urine function
Normal lab values: CBC, CMP, thyroid
studies, B12 level
Colonoscopy 2 yrs ago: normal
No STIs; HAV and HBV immune; HCV
Ab negative
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
31. 62-yr-old man with stable virologic suppression on EFV/FTC/TDF
Controlled hypertension, hyperlipidemia; comedications: hydrochlorothiazide, simvastatin
Recent weight loss; reports low energy and fatigue; wants to sleep all the time
Denies depression; lab values and other tests negative/normal
Which of the following is the most likely
explanation for his presentation?
A. Occult malignancy
B. Severe depression
C. Medicine toxicity
D. Atrial fibrillation
E. Frailty
F. Something else
Please respond using your mobile device 12345678910
32. The Concept of Frailty
Multisystem clinical syndrome that reflects biological rather than chronological age; regarded as
an end-stage state[1]
Associated with loss of functional homeostasis, inability to recover fully after stressors, and
morbidity and excess mortality[1]
Other tools: FRAIL Scale, Study of Osteoporotic Fractures (SOF) index, Clinical Frailty Scale[3-5]
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comReferences in slidenotes.
Fried Frailty Phenotype[2]
Frailty Characteristic Clinical Criteria*
Shrinking Unintentional weight loss (> 10 lbs) in prior year, sarcopenia
Muscle weakness Poor grip strength (lowest quintile by sex, BMI)
Poor endurance/exhaustion Self-reported exhaustion
Slowness Walking time per 15 ft (slowest quintile by sex, height)
Low activity Low kcal/week expenditure (lowest quintile by sex)
*Frailty defined as presence of ≥ 3 criteria; prefrailty as presence of 1-2 criteria.
33. Frailty More Prevalent in HIV-Infected vs
HIV-Uninfected Persons
Assessment of frailty* in HIV-infected (n = 521) and -uninfected (n = 513) pts in AGEhIV cohort
Frailty/prefrailty associated with HIV infection, advanced age, smoking, chronic HCV infection, depression,
low BMI,† and waist-to-hip ratio
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comKooij KW, et al. AIDS. 2016;30:241-250.
Frailty Prevalence by Age/HIV Status Individual Frailty Criteria
*Using Fried frailty phenotype. †In HIV-infected patients only.
Nonfrail
Prefrail
Frail
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pts(%)
HIV Status
Age (Yrs)
0
5
10
15
20
HIV infected
HIV uninfected
Pts(%)
25
30
P < .001
P < .001P < .001
P < .001
P = .04
+ -
45-50
+ -
50-55
+ -
55-60
+ -
60-65
+ -
> 65
34. Frailty Associated With Increased Risk of
Hospitalization
Prospective evaluation of frailty in HIV-infected pts (N = 445)[1]
– Frailty prevalence: 9%
– Predictors of frailty: higher number of comorbidities and past OIs, increased
depressive symptoms, antidepressant use, lower serum albumin, unemployment
– Frailty associated with excess hospitalizations and longer inpatient hospital stays
ALIVE: evaluation of frailty in HIV-infected (n = 417) and HIV-uninfected
individuals (n = 886)[2]
– Frailty prevalence: 12.1% overall; 13.4% among HIV-infected pts
– Frailty significantly associated with all-cause hospitalization rates (HR: 1.41; 95%
CI: 1.06-1.87; P < .05)
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
1. Önen NF, et al. J Infect. 2009;59:346-352.
2. Piggott DA, et al. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2017;72:389-394.
35. Frailty Risk Factors in Aging HIV-Positive Pts
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comErlandson KM, et al. IAS 2011. Abstract TUPE124.
Incidence(%)
Diabetes
Frail (n = 33)
Prefrail (n = 185)
Nonfrail (n = 141)
Risk Factors (OR: Frail vs Nonfrail)
Neurologic
Disease
Psychiatric
Disease
CVD Unhealthy
Weight
Arthritis Osteoporosis Viral
Hepatitis
HR: 5.1
P = .007
HR: 3.9
P < .001
HR: 3.9
P = .002
HR: 3.8
P = .067
HR: 3.7
P = .004
HR: 3.6
P = .001
HR: 3.5
P = .022
HR: 3.3
P = .004
0
20
40
60
80
36. In your practice, which of the following is the most
common reason for modifying ART in your older pts?
A. Bone disease (osteopenia/osteoporosis)
B. Renal disease (decrease in glomerular filtration rate)
C. Neurocognitive impairment
D. Polypharmacy and pharmacologic interactions
E. Metabolic complications (diabetes or lipid concerns)
F. Something else
Please respond using your mobile device 12345678910
37. Case 2: Recent Fracture and Diminished Bone
Health
62-yr-old pt returns for a visit; has suffered a wrist fracture in a fall
Characteristic Finding
Current ART regimen/HIV status Stable suppression on X + FTC/TDF for 12 yrs; current HIV-1 RNA undetectable
CD4+ cell count 425 cells/mm3
Comorbidities Hypertension and hyperlipidemia, both controlled
Medications Hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg QD Simvastatin 10 mg QD
Vital signs Temp 98.6ºF; pulse 80 and regular, BP 130/76 mm Hg, RR 12
Weight 160 lbs (lost 10 lbs in last yr)
Other
Reports low energy and fatigue;
wants to sleep all the time
Denies depressed mood, easy
bruisability, hair loss
No fevers/chills/night sweats; no
lymphadenopathy or edema
Normal urine function and lab values
No STIs; HAV and HBV immune; HCV
Ab negative
Bone health
Recently suffered a wrist fracture in a fall
DXA T-scores: L-spine: -2.6; femoral neck: -2.7; hip: -2.6
38. 62-yr-old man with stable virologic suppression on EFV/FTC/TDF
Controlled hypertension, hyperlipidemia; comedications: hydrochlorothiazide, simvastatin
Recent weight loss; reports low energy and fatigue; wants to sleep all the time
Recent wrist fracture; DXA T-scores: L-spine: -2.6; femoral neck: -2.7; hip: -2.6
Discussion: How would you adjust the pt’s ART
regimen?
NRTI Backbone
A. ABC/3TC
B. FTC/TAF
C. FTC/TDF
D. Something else
E. I would not adjust this pt’s
backbone
Third Agent
A. DTG
B. EVG/COBI
C. DRV/RTV
D. Something else
E. I would not adjust this pt’s third
agent
39. Fracture Prevalence Is Increased in Older HIV-
Infected Pts
Meta-analysis: HIV-positive pts had 6.4-fold increased risk of low BMD and 3.7-fold
increased risk of osteoporosis[1]
8525 HIV-infected pts compared with 2,208,792 uninfected pts in Partners HealthCare
System, 1996-2008[2]
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
Women Men
Age (Yrs)
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
1.0
0
FracturePrevalence/
100Persons
30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79
P = .002
(overall comparison)
HIV
Non-HIV
HIV
Non-HIV
Age (Yrs)
7.0
6.0
5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
1.0
0
FracturePrevalence/
100Persons
20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69
P < .0001
(overall comparison)
1. Brown TT, et al. AIDS. 2006;20:2165-2174. 2. Triant V, et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2008;93:3499-3504.
40. Recommendations for Evaluation of Bone
Disease in HIV
Brown TT, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2015;60:1242-1251. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
HIV-Infected Population Assessment Monitoring
Men 40-49 yrs of age
Premenopausal women
≥ 40 yrs of age
Assess risk of fragility
fracture using FRAX
For pts with FRAX score ≤ 10%,
monitor FRAX in 2-3 yrs
For pts with FRAX score > 10%,
perform DXA
Men ≥ 50 yrs of age
Postmenopausal women
Pts with fragility fracture
history, receiving chronic
glucocorticoids, or at high
risk of falls
Assess BMD using DXA
For pts with advanced osteopenia,
monitor DXA in 1-2 yrs
For pts with mild or moderate
osteopenia, monitor DXA in 5 yrs
For pts started on bisphosphonates
(significantly reduced BMD or fracture
history), repeat DXA in 2 yrs
41. ART Considerations for Pts With Bone
Complications
DHHS considerations[1]
– Consider avoiding TDF: associated with greater decrease in BMD
along with renal tubulopathy, urine phosphate wasting, and
osteomalacia
– Consider ABC/3TC or FTC/TAF
Significantly greater BMD loss with PI-based regimens vs RAL-
based regimens (when used with FTC/TDF)[2]
DTG/ABC/3TC associated with less bone turnover than
EFV/TDF/FTC[3]
1. DHHS Guidelines. July 2016. 2. Brown TT, et al. J Infect Dis. 2015;212:1241-1249.
3. Tebas P, et al. AIDS. 2015;29:2459-2464. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
42. Case 2: Take-Home Points
Observation Recommendations
Frailty is more prevalent among
HIV-infected vs HIV-uninfected
individuals
Assess pts for frailty; consider Fried Frailty Phenotype or
other available tests
Fracture prevalence and low
BMD common among pts with
HIV
Some ART regimens have larger
impact on BMD loss than others
Assess pts for BMD loss or risk of bone disease depending
on risk factors
For pts at risk for or with BMD loss or bone disease,
consider ART modifications
• Backbone: consider FTC/TAF or ABC/3TC vs
FTC/TDF
• Greater BMD loss observed with PI-based regimens
vs RAL-based regimens
43. Case 3: Preventive Care Considerations for
Healthy Older Patients With HIV
44. Case 3: Presentation
55-yr-old white man transfers care from another state
Characteristic Finding
HIV status
Stable suppression for 15 yrs on
RAL + FTC/TDF; current HIV-1 RNA
undetectable
CD4+ cell count 275 cells/mm3
Family history
Father died from stroke at age 76
Mother breast cancer survivor at
age 75; has T2DM and
hyperlipidemia
Healthy sister age 57
Social
Lives with HIV+ husband; sexually
active with husband only
Smokes on weekends/at bars
Alcohol daily 1-2 glasses of wine
with dinner; no illicit drug use
Characteristic Finding
Additional
findings
Excellent tolerability to HIV meds
Reports irritability because of job
stress but sleeping well
Reports 25-lb weight gain in past 2
yrs; stopped exercising because of
injury to ankle and never resumed
No fevers/chills/night sweats; no
lymphadenopathy
No pulmonary or cardiovascular
complaints; no edema
Normal urine function and bowel
habits
45. Case 3: Presentation
55-yr-old white man transfers care from another state
Characteristic Finding
Physical exam
Vital signs: temp 98.6ºF; pulse rate 80 and regular, BP 146/88 mm Hg,
RR 12, weight 205 lbs, BMI 30.1
PE unremarkable
Laboratory values
Normal lab values: CBC, CMP (except glucose 108 mg/dL)
TC 205 mg/dL, LDL 124 mg/dL, HDL 30 mg/dL, TG 255 mg/dL
STI testing negative
HAV and HBV immune; HCV Ab negative
ASCVD 10-yr risk 20.2%
46. Which disease currently poses a greater risk to
his health?
A. HIV infection
B. Cardiovascular disease
C. Something else
Please respond using your mobile device 1234567891012345678910
47. Keeping Healthy HIV Pts Healthy: How to Beat
Inflammation and Limit Comorbidities
Adhere to HIV medications
Quit smoking
Refine diet and maintain normal weight
– For obese individuals, a hypocaloric diet can reduce inflammation[1]
Exercise
– Study of sedentary HIV-infected pts on ART (N = 49) found that 60 mins brisk
walking ± 30 mins strength training 3 times/wk for 12 wks improved functional
status and reduced inflammatory markers/immune activation[2]
Reduce alcohol intake; avoid drugs
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
1. Hermsdorff HH, et al. Endocrine. 2009;36:445-451.
2. Bonato M, et al. BMC Infect Dis. 2017;17:61.
48. HIV Infection Lowers Threshold at Which
Alcohol Causes Harm
Study of alcohol intake and mortality or physiologic injury in HIV-infected (n
= 18,145) and HIV-uninfected (n = 42,228) individuals in the Veterans Aging
Cohort Study
– 76% of HIV-infected pts with HIV-1 RNA < 500 copies/mL
Threshold for association between alcohol and mortality differed by HIV
status
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comJustice AC, et al. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2016;161:95-103.
HIV Status Threshold, Drinks/Mo Mortality, HR (95% CI)
Infected ≥ 30 1.30 (1.14-1.50)
Uninfected ≥ 70 1.13 (1.00-1.28)
Similarly, lower alcohol threshold for physiologic injury (eg, falls, fractures) in
HIV-infected pts
49. START: Cancer Events With Immediate vs
Deferred ART
INSIGHT START Group. N Engl J Med. 2015;373:795-807. Lundgren J, et al. IAS 2015. Abstract MOSY0302.
Cancer Event, n
Immediate
ART
(n = 2326)
Deferred
ART
(n = 2359)
Total 14 39
Kaposi sarcoma 1 11
Lymphoma, NHL + HL 3 10
Prostate cancer 2 3
Lung cancer 2 2
Anal cancer 1 2
Cervical or testis
cancer
1 2
Other types* 4 9
*Immediate ART: squamous cell carcinoma, plasma cell myeloma, bladder cancer, fibrosarcoma. Deferred ART: gastric
adenocarcinoma, breast cancer, ureteric cancer, malignant melanoma, myeloid leukemia, thyroid cancer, leiomyosarcoma, liver
cancer, squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck.
Time to Cancer Event
10
8
6
4
2
0
Cumulative%WithEvent
0 12 24 36 48 60
Mo
Deferred ART
Immediate ART
Rate/100 PY: immediate, 0.20; deferred, 0.56
(HR: 0.36; 95% CI: 0.19-0.66; P = .001)
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
50. HIV and Cancer
Assessment of malignancy in HIV-infected pts in EuroSIDA (N = 15,648)
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.comShepherd L, et al. HIV Med. 2016;17:590-600.
Malignancy Type Malignancy Risk Factors
Infection-related
malignancies
Hodgkin/non-Hodgkin lymphoma (EBV)
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HBV/HCV)
Kaposi sarcoma (HHV-8)
Anal, cervical, vulvar, vaginal, penile, stomach, and
oral cancers (HPV)
Age
Lower CD4+ cell count
HBV coinfection
Detectable HIV-1 RNA
Prior ADM
Infection-
unrelated
malignancies
Lung cancer
Prostate cancer
Colorectal cancer
Breast cancer
Age
Lower CD4+ cell count
HBV coinfection
Current smoking
51. D:A:D: Impact of Smoking Cessation on Cancer
Incidence in HIV-Infected Pts
Baseline characteristics: 72.5% male; 20.8% prior AIDS; 46% current smoker; 20% exsmoker; 31%
never smoked; median age: 40 yrs (IQR: 34-46); median CD4+ cell count: 444 cells/mm3 (IQR: 295-632)
Pts followed for median of 9 yrs (IQR: 6-11)
Shepherd L, et al. CROI 2017. Abstract 131.
Adjusted Rate Ratios for Specific Cancers in 35,424 HIV+ Pts With 285,103 PYFU
Smoking Status Smoking-
Unrelated Cancer
Smoking-Related
Cancer (Excl. Lung)
Lung Cancer
Never (reference)
Current smoker
Ex at baseline
Ex: < 1 yr
Ex: 1-2 yrs
Ex: 2-3 yrs
Ex: 3-5 yrs
Ex: > 5 yrs
Adjusted Rate Ratio (95% CI)
0.5 1 2
P trend
= .04
P trend
= .04
P trend
= .13
0.5 1 2 4 1 2 4 8 16 32
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
52. Cancer Prevention
Encourage smoking cessation
Provide hepatitis and HPV vaccinations
Advise sunscreen and avoidance of sun overexposure
Screening:
– Yearly cervical and anal Pap tests as indicated[1]
– Colon cancer screening at age 50[1]
– Breast cancer screening every other yr at age 50[2,3]
– Prostate screening risks and benefits discussed at age 50[2,4]
– If hepatitis B or C positive, screen for liver cancer[1]
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
53. Screening With Low-Dose CT Reduces Lung
Cancer Mortality in High-Risk Pts
N = 53,454 persons at high risk for lung
cancer at 33 US medical centers, 2002-
2004[1]
– Randomized to 3 annual low-dose CT
screening vs single-view chest x-ray
– Low-dose CT reduced RR lung cancer
mortality by 20% (95% CI: 6.8% to 26.7%;
P = .004) and RR all-cause mortality by
6.7% (95% CI: 1.2% to 13.6%; P = .02)
USPSTF recommends annual low-dose
CT screening in adults aged 55-80 yrs who
have a 30 pack-yr smoking history and
currently smoke or quit smoking within the
past 15 yrs[2]
1. National Lung Screening Trial Research Team, et al. N Engl J Med. 2011;365:395-409.
2. USPSTF. Lung Cancer Screening Guidelines. 2013.
Cumulative Numbers of Lung Cancers
and Deaths From Lung Cancer
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
800
CumulativeNo.
ofLungCancers
600
400
0
200
1000
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Low-dose CT
Chest radiography
400
CumulativeNo.of
LungCancersDeaths
300
200
0
100
500
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Yrs Since Randomization
Low-dose CT
Chest radiography
1200
54. CT Screening for Lung Cancer in HIV-Infected
Smokers
Prospective CT screening in 224 HIV-positive current or former
smokers aged ≥ 25 yrs detected 1 lung cancer in 678 PYFU
– Median age: 48 yrs (IQR: 44-53); median CD4+ nadir: 179 cells/mm3
(IQR: 61-332)
Hulbert A, et al. J Thorac Oncol. 2014;9:752-759.
Characteristics Adjusted OR for Lung Cancer 95% CI P Value
Increasing age 1.08 1.01-1.15 .02
Increasing pack-yrs 1.09 1.04-1.15 < .0001
Decreasing CD4+ nadir 1.006 1.002-1.01 .006
Increased SD/TLV 1.23 1.03-1.47 .02
Factors Associated With Lung Cancer on Multivariate Regression
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
55. ANRS EP48 HIV CHEST: CT Screening for Lung
Cancer in HIV-Infected Smokers
Prospective CT screening in 442 HIV-positive smokers aged
≥ 40 yrs with CD4+ nadir < 350 cells/mm3 detected 9 lung
cancers
– Median follow-up time after CT: 24.4 mos (IQR: 22.8-26.4)
– Median age: 49.8 yrs (IQR: 46.3-53.9); median CD4+ nadir:
168 cells/mm3 (IQR: 75-256)
6 of 9 lung cancers detected by CT were detected at early
disease stage
Makinson A, et al. AIDS. 2016;30:573-582. Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
56. Case 3: Take-home Points
Observation Recommendations
Healthy aging pts with HIV
should be encouraged to
maintain health and be
aware of increased risk of
HIV-specific comorbidities
Adhere to HIV medications
Quit smoking
Maintain normal weight
Exercise
Reduce alcohol intake; avoid drugs
Cancer risk should be
managed in HIV-infected pts
and screening provided
Encourage smoking cessation
Provide hepatitis and HPV vaccination
Provide cancer screening as indicated
Slide credit: clinicaloptions.com
57. clinicaloptions.com/hiv
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