1 / 55

HIV: HISTORY CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE

HIV: HISTORY CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE. John G. Bartlett Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Conflicts -- None. HIV REVIEW History Current standards Future. HIV NATURAL HISTORY. HIV transmission ↓ 2- 4 weeks Acute HIV (50 – 90 %) ↓ 1- 3 weeks Asymptomatic

ceri
Download Presentation

HIV: HISTORY CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE

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. HIV: HISTORYCURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE John G. Bartlett Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Conflicts -- None

  2. HIV REVIEW History Current standards Future

  3. HIV NATURAL HISTORY HIV transmission ↓ 2- 4 weeks Acute HIV (50 – 90 %) ↓ 1- 3 weeks Asymptomatic ↓ 8 years AIDS ↓ 1.3 years Death

  4. HIV RISK CATEGORIES (2010)CDC data – 48,298 cases MSM (gay men) – 63% Injection drug use – 8% Heterosexual transmission – 25% Blood transfusions – 0% Perinatal transmission – (162) African American – 44% Poverty – 2.1% (8 x ↑)

  5. HIV: HISTORY 1981-2013

  6. CDC: MMWR June 5, 1981 9 MSM with PCP CDC: MMWR July 3, 1981

  7. HIV/AIDS – FIRST DECADE HIV: Circa 1981-91 Patients: Most died • Diarrhea • Dementia • Disgrace • Image: IDU & MSM • Fear: Contagion • Untreatable

  8. WHO WINNING PHOTO AWARD:AIDS – THE HUMAN TRAGEDY

  9. Anthony Fauci“Goose pimples” 1981 ID/IMMUNOLOGY:Wegener disease & polyarteritis nodosa; Director of NIAID

  10. Child with hemophilia – HIV discovered 12/17/84 – banned from school and given 6 month diagnosis. Died 5 years later, 4 months before passage of the Ryan White Care Act – now $2 billion/year for HIV drugs for 500,000. Bono – “Greatest man I ever met” 1984 Ryan White

  11. Surgeon General under President Reagan Champion of – Sex education Condoms Handicapped children Cigarette harm “The Letter” was an AIDS wakeup call C. Everett Koop“The Letter” 1987

  12. AIDS QUILT – 1987 Panel are 3’ by 6’ with tributes to people who were lost to HIV → Washington Mall 1987-1996, weight = 54 tons, 94,000 names (20%)

  13. Civil disobedience: Wall Street 1987, NY Post Office 1987, St. Patrick’s Cathedral 1989, NIH 1990 (Now TAG) AIDS COALITION to UNLEASH POWER: 1987

  14. Martin DelaneyActivist (without AIDS)1945-2008 Founded Project Inform “for medically supervised guerrilla trials” – Major force in NIAID, FDA and ethics

  15. The Trial: AZT vs. placebo (n=282). DSMB stopped study: 19 deaths (placebo) vs. 1 (AZT) (Fischl MA. NEJM 1987;317:185)

  16. Jeff Murray, MDDeputy DirectorDivision of Antimicrobial Drug Products for FDA Major facilitator of HIV drugs (n=28) and, more recently HCV (#24 in trials)

  17. “I have AIDS” (Trumped efforts of millions to destigmatize HIV infection) MAGIC JOHNSONThe Announcement: 1991

  18. The development of protease inhibitors and beginning of HAART PROTEASE 1996

  19. HAART: IDV/AZT/3TC Results for NDV at 52 weeks – 80% vs. zero THE STUDY THAT CHANGED AIDS Gulick RM. Merck 035 NEJM 1997;337:734 ■IDV / 3TC / AZT ●IDV ∆AZT / 3TC

  20. “Hit hard and hit early” … Time Magazine: Man-of-the-year, 1996 David Ho

  21. Mortality From 1990-2004 in the Johns Hopkins HIV Clinical Cohort Lau B, et al. Non-AIDS Related Mortality Risk Exceeds AIDS-related Mortality Among Injecting Drug Users with CD4+ Counts Above 200 Cells/mm3. CROI Denver, CO, 2006

  22. NRTI NNRTI PI El CCR5 II 1987 AZT ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ 1991-92 ddI, ddC ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ 1995 d4T ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ 1996 3TC ------ SQV ------ ------ ------ 1997 ------ NVP RTV, IDV ------ ------ ------ 1997 ------ DLV NFV ------ ------ ------ 1998 ------ EFV ------ ------ ------ ------ 1999 ABC ------ APV ------ ------ ------ 2000 ------ ------ LPV ------ ------ ------ 2001 TDF ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ 2003 FTC ------ ATV ENF ------ ------ 2005 ------ ------ TPV ------ ------ ------ 2006 ------ ------ DRV ------ ------ ------ • ------ ------ ------ ------ MVC RAL • ------ ETR ------ ------ ------ ------ • ------ RPV ------ ------ ------ ------ • ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ EVG 2013 ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ DTG

  23. HIV SCIENCE AND CARE1996-2013 US & Europe (“Resource Rich”) • Fine tuning 1996-now • Treatment “done” – 2008 (Fauci) • New priorities: • International • Domestic: Cure & Prevention International (“Low Resource”) • Resource limits: Drugs • Infrastructure for chronic care • WHO – Plan universal ART when resources allow

  24. “AIDS in Africa is so devastating – it threatens the social, political and economic stability of the world” ↓ Clinton Foundation (2001) • Low cost drugs • Pediatric HIV President Bill ClintonState of the Union Speech: 2000

  25. Subsaharan Africa:12% global population69% of HIV cases

  26. CLINTON FOUNDATION 2002-

  27. Bush: Do those HIV drugs work? O’Neil: “Let me tell you about my morning in the Moore Clinic” Bush: “Tony , we need to do something, Think big – really big” President George W. BushPEPFAR: 2002

  28. Fauci: “Thinking big” Collaborators – M. Dybul, P. Mugyeni, E. Goosby, J.W. Pape Plan Proposed: Would be considered January 2003: “Seldom have we been offered the opportunity to do so much for so many” President George W. Bush

  29. Peter Mugyeni and Laura BushState of the Union Address Bush: “$15 billion for Africa” Mugyeni: Jumped up → cheered → hugged the First Lady

  30. Bono: “PEPFAR – Greatest act of heroism since we jumped into WWII” NYTimes 12/1/11

  31. Need to put banner Prominent Voices to Address AIDS 2012 Leaders from the worlds of science, diplomacy, politics, philanthropy and entertainment are speaking at AIDS 2012, including:  •  President Bill Clinton  • U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton  • U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius  • South African Deputy President KgalemaMotlanthe • Former U.S. First Lady Laura Bush  • HRH Mette-Marit, Crown Princess of Norway  • World Bank President Jim Yong Kim  • UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé • Nobel Laureate Françoise Barré-Sinoussi • NIAID Director Anthony Fauci • Philanthropist Bill Gates  • Humanitarian Elton John  • Actress Whoopi Goldberg

  32. Hillary Rodham Clinton2012 IAS Conference – Washington DC “Blueprint for an AIDS-free generation”

  33. HIV REVIEW History Current standards Future

  34. HIV TREATMENT (DHHS & IAS-USA) Test: All persons age 13-64 yrs yrs(CDC); annual if risk Treat: Everybody with HIV What: TDF/FTC or ABC/3TC plus EFV, DRV/r, ATV/r, RAL Monitor: VL, CD4, etc. Change: VL >200 or ADR

  35. LIFE EXPECTANCY – DENMARKHelleberg M. CID 2012 [in press] 35 year old man HIV

  36. HIV CARE AND RESEARCH

  37. HIV REVIEW History Current standards Future

  38. HIV: THE FUTURE (US) Research priorities • Treatment – done (2008) • Prevention • Cure Operational challenges • Care delivery: 28% have controlled HIV viremia • Who will be primary provider (Is this a specialty • Healthcare reform

  39. TransmissionHIV transmission efficiency correlates with Viral Load – No transmissions with VL <1500 c/mL (2000) Transmission efficiency• 1/900 coital acts• M→F & F→M near equal• Maximum risk in primary HIV Treatment for prevention• HPTN 052 (2012)• Changed Global policy Never been a confirmed case with sexual transmission (BMHIVA) (2013) Quinn T. NEJM 2000;342:921

  40. HIV TREATMENT FOR PREVENTION:HPTN 052 M. Cohen (PI) (Cohen MS. NEJM 2011;365:493) Protocol: Discordant couples, CD4 350-550: Randomized to ART vs. no ART until CD4 <250 Results: N=1,763 (M=890, F-873) ART No Art n=886 n=877 HIV transmission* 1*** 27** *Linked cases (28 transmissions unlinked) **Protection with ART = 96% -- Study continues to determine durability ***Single exception preceded viral suppression

  41. HPTN 052: The study that changed HIV global strategy

  42. Treatment as Prevention: Effect of ART Coverage on HIV Incidence in Rural South Africa(Tanser F. 2012 CROI;Abstr. 136LV) Spatial Estimates of Proportion of HIV Patients on ART Adjusted HIV Infection Rate by ARV Coverage Category 2007 2008 2009 P=0.590 P=0.002 2010 2011 P<0.001 P=0.015 <10% 10-20% 20-30% 30-40% >40% Annual population based HIV surveillance in rural KwaZulu-Natal 2004 – 2011: 1395 HIV seroconversions among 16,588 HIV negative adults ≥15 years of age Tanser F, et al. 19th CROI; Seattle, WA; March 5-8, 2012. Abst. 136LB.

  43. Efficacy of Daily OralFTC/TDF PrEP FDA approved TDF/FTC for PrEP July 2012 . Candidates: High risk MSM and discordant couples

  44. “The Berlin Patient” • HIV + leukemia → chemotherapy and stem cell tx → 5 yrs; No HIV detected (R. Siliciano) • 2012: 2 more patients – Brigham Hospital, Boston (IAS Conference 2012)

  45. The “Gardner Cascade”(Gardner EM. CID 2011;52:793)

  46. Estimated 14% have viral suppression!!

  47. Sensitivity: 93% Specificity: 99.8% Distribution: Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, RiteAid, Kroger, etc. MAKE IT EASY

  48. P4P4P: THE STATUS OF PAYING PATIENTS FOR SELF CARE Practice: Widespread and international Incentives: Cash, groceries, lottery tickets, meal tickets. Conditions: Chronic – smoking, obesity , BP control, diabetes, HIV HIV trial: HPTN 65 – Controlled trial, (unblinded) HIV test – $25, Enroll in care – $70, NDV – $280/yr (1.7% of HIV care cost) Status: Widely practiced, no one wants to talk about it. Adherence guidelines refused (Ann Intern Med 2012;156:817)

More Related