1 / 25

AIDS/ HIV – Current Senario

AIDS/ HIV – Current Senario. S. Jonathan Nimal Department of Biotechnology Pondicherry University India. Objectives. Basic concepts of HIV has been dwelt. Current statistics of HIV/AIDS Current therapy available on the market Current Vaccines on trial.

ula
Download Presentation

AIDS/ HIV – Current Senario

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AIDS/ HIV – Current Senario S. Jonathan Nimal Department of Biotechnology Pondicherry University India

  2. Objectives • Basic concepts of HIV has been dwelt. • Current statistics of HIV/AIDS • Current therapy available on the market • Current Vaccines on trial

  3. Purified Human Immunodeficiency Virus

  4. Types of HIV • HIV 1 • Subtype A & D – found in sub Sahara Africa • Subtype B – found in US & Canada • Subtype C – found in South Africa & India • Subtype E – found in south east Asia • Subtype G & H - found in Russia & Central Africa • Subtype I – found in Cyprus • HIV 2

  5. HIV Life cycle Entry Reverse Transcription Integration Cleavage Assembly & Budding

  6. WHO classification of clinical stages of infection • Children – Three stages • Adults & Adolescents – Four stages

  7. WHO Clinical stage I in Children • Asymptomatic • Generalized lymphadenopathy

  8. WHO Clinical stage II in Children • Unexplained chronic diarrhoea • Severe persistent or recurrent candidiasis outside the neonatal period • Weight loss or failure to thrive • Persistent fever • Recurrent severe bacterial infection

  9. WHO Clinical stage III in Children • AIDS – defining opportunistic infections • Severe failure to thrive • Progressive encephalopathy • Malignancy • Recurrent septicaemia or meningitis

  10. WHO Clinical stage I in Adults & Adolescents • Asymptomatic • Persistent generalized lymphadenopathy • Performance scale 1: asymptomatic, normal activity

  11. WHO Clinical stage II in Adults & Adolescents • Weight loss, <10% of the body weight • Minor mucocutaneous manifestations • Herpes Zoster within the last 5 years • Recurrent upper respiratory tract infections • Performance scale 2: symtomatic, normal activity

  12. WHO Clinical stage III in Adults & Adolescents • Weight loss, >10% of the body weight • Unexplained chronic diarrhoea >1 month • Unexplained prolonged fever (interminant or constant) >1 month • Oral candidiasis (thrush) • Pulmunary tuberculosis • Severe bacterial infection • Performance scale 3: bed-ridden, >50% of the day during the last month

  13. WHO Clinical stage IV in Adults & Adolescents • HIV wasting syndrome • Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia • Toxoplasmosis of the brain • Cryptosporidiosis with diarrhoea • Cryptococcosis, extra pulmonary • Atypical mycobacteriosis • Salmonella septicaemia • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy • Performance scale 4: bed-ridden, >50% of the day during the last month

  14. WHO Clinical stage IV in Adults & Adolescents (Cond.) • Cytomegalovirus disease of an organ other than liver, spleen or lymph nodes. • Hepes simplex virus infection, mucateneous >1 month, or visceral any duration • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy • Any disseminated endemic mycosis (I.e. histoplasmosis, coccidiodomycosis) • Candidiasis of the oesophagus, trachea, bronchi or lungs • Lymphoma • Kaposi’s sarcoma

  15. Global Estimates for adults and children, end 2003 • People living with HIV/AIDS – 40 million (34 – 46 million) • New HIV infections in 2003 – 5 million (4.2 – 5.8 million) • Deaths due to HIV/AIDS in 2003 – 3 million (2.5 – 3.5 million)

  16. Estimated number of newly infected adults and children with HIV during 2003 Eastern Europe & central Asia 180 000 – 280 000 Western Europe 30 000 – 40 000 East Asia & Pacific 150 000- - 270 000 North Africa & Middle East 43 000 – 67 000 Caribbean 45 000 – 80 000 South & South East Asia 610 000- 1.1 million North America 36 000 – 50 000 Sub–Saharan Africa 3.0 – 3.4 million South America 120 000 – 180 000 Australia & New Zealand 700 – 1 000

  17. Estimated number of adults and children with HIV/AIDS, end 2003 Eastern Europe & central Asia 1.2 – 1.8 million Western Europe 520 000 – 680 000 North America 790 000 – 1.2 million East Asia & Pacific 700 000 – 1.3 million North Africa & Middle East 470 000 – 730 000 South & South East Asia 4.6 – 8.2 million Caribbean 350 000 – 590 000 Sub – Saharan Africa 25.0 – 28.2 million Latin America 1.3 – 1.9 million Australia & New Zealand 12 000 – 18 000

  18. Estimated adult and child deaths due to HIV/AIDS during 2003 Eastern Europe & central Asia 23 000 – 37 000 Western Europe 2 600 – 3 400 North America 12 000 – 18 000 East Asia & Pacific 32 000 – 58 000 North Africa & Middle East 35 000 – 50 000 Caribbean 30 000 – 50 000 South & South East Asia 330 000 – 590 000 Sub – Saharan Africa 2.2 – 2.4 million Latin America 49 000 – 70 000 Australia & New Zealand < 100

  19. Types of HIV Drugs • Entry inhibitors • Reverse Transcriptase inhibitors • Integrase inhibitors (On study) • Protease inhibitors • Assembly & budding inhibitors (On study)

  20. Entry inhibitors • Fusion inhibitor • Fuzeon (enfuvirtide, or T-20)

  21. Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors • Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NsRTIs) • Zidovudine(ZDV, AZT) • Didanosine (ddl) • Stavudine (d4T) • Lamivudine (3TC) • Abacavir (ABC) • Non - nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NsRTIs) • Nevirapine (NVP) • Efavirenz (EFZ) • Nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NtRTIs) • Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate

  22. Protease Inhibitors • Saquinavir (SQV) • Ritnovir (RTV) • Indinavir (IDV) • Nelfinavir (NFV) • Lopinavir/retinavir (LPV/r)

  23. AIDS Vaccine • Two vaccines on trial • AIDSVAX B/B – tested in North America & Amsterdam • AIDSVAX B/E – tested in Thailand Each mixed the surface proteins (gp120) from two strains of HIV

  24. New vaccines on human trial • tgAAC09 – begun in Belgium • Single shot vaccine • Uses Targeted Genetics ‘ rAAV (recombinant adeno associated viral vector) Technology

  25. New DNA vaccines on human trial • Vaccine - ADVAX • Vaccine is tailored for C strain of HIV • Worked by The Aron Diamond AIDS ResearchCenter & International AIDS Vaccine initiative • Trail in New York & Rochester • Developed on synthetic DNA based on the genetic material available • Safe to use

More Related