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Case Presentation Managing treatment side effects in the correctional environment

Case Presentation Managing treatment side effects in the correctional environment. Stephen Tabet, MD, MPH University of Washington Division of Infectious Diseases Harborview Medical Center Northwest AETC. Background.

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Case Presentation Managing treatment side effects in the correctional environment

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  1. Case PresentationManaging treatment side effects in the correctional environment Stephen Tabet, MD, MPH University of Washington Division of Infectious Diseases Harborview Medical Center Northwest AETC

  2. Background • 48-year-old Caucasian female presents to the prison infimary with yeast vaginitis. A review of her chart reveals this is her fourth episode since her initial incacercation 2 months ago. She had previously been treated with topical miconazole vaginal suppositories. • On examination, she has erythematous vaginal mucosa with few areas of abrasion; no ulcerations. • What would you do next? • At this point, would you do a vaginal yeast culture and do resistance testing?

  3. Background • The patient is treated with oral fluconazole 150 mg/day for 3 days. HIV testing is done. • One week later, the patient presents asymptomatic with minimal vaginal erythema. She is positive for HIV antibodies. • Among other labs, CD4 count and viral load are done. CD4 T-cell count is 32 and HIV bDNA is >500,000 • She is given tmp/smx for PCP prophylaxis and azithromycin for MAC prophylaxis

  4. Next Step? • The patient is expected to be incarcerated another 16 months. • Is offering antiretroviral therapy appropriate or should it be addressed when she is released?

  5. Initial Regimen • An initial regimen of d4T (30 mg) BID (weight adjusted), 3TC (150 mg) BID, and SQV (400 mg) / RTV (400 mg) BID is initiated • One month later - HIV bDNA: 60,575 • 3 months later - HIV RNA: undetectable (<50 copies); CD4 count: 219 • She has no recurrence of yeast vaginitis

  6. Lipid Profile • Six months after starting HAART, a routine lipid and glucose profile reveals the following: • Fasting total cholesterol 295 mg/dl • HDL 52 mg/dl • LDL 193 mg/dl • Triglycerides 352 mg/dl • Fasting glucose 83 mg/dl • (HIV RNA remains undetectable and CD4+ T-cells increase further to 280.)

  7. > 1 Physical Features Peripheral Wasting Characteristic Fat > 1 Metabolic Features Elevated Blood Lipids(cholesterol and/or triglycerides) Elevated C-peptides Elevated blood glucose Proposed Definition of PI-Associated Lipodystrophy (Carr et al. Lancet. 1999;353:2093-98)

  8. Risk Factors for Lipodystrophy • Age > 40 • HIV-infected > 7 years • AIDS > 2 years • Hemophiliac • Nadir CD4 count < 100 • Time since CD4 nadir ≥ 3 years (Lichtenstein et al. 13th ICOA, 2000)

  9. Patient’s Lifestyle • The patient reports eating a regular prison diet consisting of 3800 calories/day. She is placed on a “low-cholesterol diet”. • She doesn’t have hypertension or diabetes mellitus

  10. Discussion What Would You Do Next? • Treat her with a ‘statin’ - HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor • Change her regimen to a PI-sparing one • Take her off her medications until her lipids normalize and then restart a different regimen • Treat her with gemfibrozil

  11. RTV/SQV, and HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors • Pharmacokinetics of Pravastatin, Atorvastatin, and Simvastatin studied in 41 subjects receiving RTV/SQV (400/400 mg) BID • Pravastatin concentrations declined by 50% with RTV/SQV • Atorvastatin concentrations increased by 4.5-fold with RTV/SQV • Simvastatin concentrations increased by 31.6-fold with RTV/SQV • Pravastatin may not need dose reduction with RTV/SQV, but Atorvastatin and Simvastatin should be reduced or avoided for patients taking RTV/SQV (Fichtenbaum, 7th CROI, 2000)

  12. The Patient is Prescribed Pravastatin • The patient is continued on her current antiretroviral regimen • She is started on Pravastatin (40 mg) QD • 3 months later her total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, and triglycerides have normalized

  13. Patient Presents Visceral Fat Accumulation • One year after starting HAART, the patient reports weight gain in her abdomen and breasts and weight loss in her buttocks, thighs and legs at her follow-up visit for treatment of hypercholesterolemia • The patient’s weight is stable at 119 lbs; her face is normal in appearance with no wasting • Her abdomen is protuberant • Her breasts are symmetrically enlarged (since last examination 7 months prior) with no palpable masses • Her thighs and legs are thin but not overtly atrophied

  14. CT Scan of Patient’s Visceral Fat Accumulation* Subcutaneous FatAccumulation† Visceral FatAccumulation‡ *L4/L5 slice†Black represents subcutaneous fat.‡Black represents visceral fat.

  15. Gender Differences: Lipodystrophy and Metabolic Differences • Women: Greater prevalence of visceral and truncal fat accumulation, insulin resistance and lactic acidosis • Men: Greater prevalence of peripheral fat wasting and hyperlipidemia (Mulligan. 7th CROI, 2000)

  16. Discussion What would you do? • Switch her to a PI-sparing regimen (Studies indicate that switching to PI sparing regimens rarely resolves lipodystrophy) • Bonnet et al. 7th CROI, 2000 • Collier et al. 8th CROI, 2001 • Bernasconi 13th Intl AIDS Conference, 2000

  17. The Patient is Continued on Current HAART • The patient is written for a daily exercise regimen • She is motivated to continue antiretrovirals

  18. Insulin Resistance • A random blood glucose sample is drawn • The patient has a fasting glucose of 187 with a normal hemoglobin A1c

  19. Discussion • What should you do?

  20. Metformin Therapy and Insulin Resistance • 26 HIV-infected, nondiabetic patients presented fat redistribution and abnormal oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) results, and they were randomly assigned to receive Metformin (500 mg) BID (n = 14) or identical placebo (n = 12) for 3 months • Main Outcome Measures: Insulin area under the curve (AUC), calculated 120 minutes following a 75-g OGTT at baseline vs a 3-month follow-up (Hadigan et al. JAMA. 2000;284:472-477)

  21. Metformin Therapy andInsulin Resistance • Results: Patients treated with Metformin demonstrated significant reductions in mean (SEM) insulin AUC 120 minutes after OGTT and at 3 months • The study suggests that a relatively low dosage of Metformin reduces insulin resistance and related cardiovascular risk parameters in HIV-infected patients with lipodystrophy (Hadigan et al. JAMA. 2000;284:472-477)

  22. Patient is Started on Metformin • The patient is started on Metformin (500 mg) BID • She is cautioned about the potential for lactic acidemia

  23. Managing Dyslipidemia in HIV: Conclusions • Dyslipidemia is influenced by HAART and host factors • Disease progression is involved in the development of dyslipidemia • Treatment changes should not be made without careful consideration of virologic and immunologic outcomes • Symptoms management and lifestyle changes should be the focus of patients with dyslipidemia

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