1 / 20

HIV Treatment in Saskatchewan

HIV Treatment in Saskatchewan. Kurt E. Williams MD FRCPC 2012/Feb/9 Saskatoon. Objectives. To review Saskatchewan epidemiology of HIV. To identify cofactors which affect the way we prescribe antiretrovirals in Saskatchewan.

osborn
Download Presentation

HIV Treatment in Saskatchewan

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 Treatment in Saskatchewan Kurt E. Williams MD FRCPC 2012/Feb/9 Saskatoon

  2. Objectives • To review Saskatchewan epidemiology of HIV. • To identify cofactors which affect the way we prescribe antiretrovirals in Saskatchewan. • To illustrate with brief case studies, some of the issues in ARV access and use.

  3. HIV Epidemiology: Current HIV Epidemic • The number of new diagnoses of HIV positive people has increased 5 fold in the last few years. • The primary risk behavior is IDU. • Heterosexual sex is likely under-rated as a risk factor in this epidemic. • First Nations people are disproportionately affected.

  4. Fig. 3: Selected Risk Factors Among HIV Cases in Saskatchewan, 2000-2009 Insert risk factors here

  5. Fig 2: HIV cases reported by Age and Gender in Saskatchewan, 2010 (Preliminary) 40 35 30 25 Number of cases 20 15 10 5 0 15-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ 1 22 34 28 22 male 4 24 24 10 1 female

  6. Proportion of HIV cases reported by Year & Health Jurisdictions

  7. Geographic Challenges in Saskatchewan • 60 - 40, rural – urban split. • Some Reserves are among the hardest hit areas so transportation is an issue.

  8. Dealing With Geography • Outreach clinics in Prince Albert, La Ronge and LaLoche. • Partnering with the TB program for transport. • Directed visits to Reserves to facilitate testing, provide medical care. • Visits involve a team (ID doc, ID nurse, pharmacist, social worker, MHO).

  9. Dealing With Geography: Goals of Rural Team Visits • To provide expert medical care. • To mentor local health care providers (peer to peer). • To provide subsequent backup by telephone, email etc for increased patient well being and decreased patient travel. • To enhance local capacity, decrease travel.

  10. Prescription of ARVs • Generally prescribed by sub-specialists in Infectious Diseases. • Generally prescribed according to published guidelines which are similar around North America. • Guidelines are specific enough that first regimens in the absence of viral resistance can be prescribed by non-ID specialists- some HIV-experienced Internists and Family Physicians.

  11. Peculiarities of the Saskatchewan Formulary • They allow appropriate latitude in prescribing practices for qualified prescribers. • ARVs are not (yet) provided free of charge for all HIV infected people in Saskatchewan. • Some ARVs remain free of charge: chronologically, all ‘old’ drugs are ‘free’ ie AZT, ddI, ddC, d4T, 3TC, saquinavir, ritonavir and indinavir. • The newer ARVs are all ‘co-pay’.

  12. Peculiarities of the Saskatchewan Formulary • Only ritonavir and 3TC are among the ARVs recommended as ‘preferred components’ in current guidelines. • Current first regimens still consist of two NRTIs plus either an NNRTI or a PI (Protease inhibitor) usually boosted with ritonavir. • Preferred NRTIs = tenofovir and emtricitabine. But abacavir and lamivudine may be equal.

  13. Peculiarities of the Saskatchewan Formulary • Preferred NNRTI = Efavirenz. • Preferred PIs = either Atazanavir or Darunavir, with ritonavir boost. • Preferred Integrase Inhibitor = Raltegravir.

  14. Why Embrace Early HIV Treatment in Saskatchewan? • The appearance of ‘Rapid Progressors’ in unusual numbers: AIDS develops after 1 -3 years after infection vs 50% by 10 years. • Reduced toxicity of current ARVs with less cumulative toxicity. • Could decrease chances of further spread: treatment as a public health measure. • Prolonged immune suppression, even with reconstitution, leads to more cancer.

  15. Frequent Patient Factors to Consider in Saskatchewan • Younger women account for more of our new cases than elsewhere. • Co-infection with HCV in 80% of new cases. • Co-infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis provides well-recognized drug interactions and IRIS (Immune Reconstitution Syndrome). • PI side-effects can include elevated lipids and cholesterol = cardiovascular disease, in already vulnerable population (First Nations).

  16. Case #1 • 37 year old caucasian male with high school education, no other training. • HIV + 2001. • Escalating viral load (200,000), CD4 count 348 (23.2%) prompted initiation of ARVs. • Combivir (AZT/3TC) + Efavirenz fall 2002. • Viral load ‘not detected’, CD4 count > 1000 (37 – 50%) essentially normal immune system.

  17. Case #1 • 2011 April: viral load = 1001, CD4 = 725 (30.3%). • 2011 early June: viral load = 59,000, CD4 = 524 (23.3%). Claimed complete adherence. • 2012 January: acknowledged some physical problems and missing appointments. Taking ARVs one month on, one off, for most of 2011. • $200 co-pay for a minimum wage earner not able to work full time.

  18. Case #1: Illustrates 3 Issues • Working poor are especially vulnerable where co-payment is required. • Pharmacists rock but you must talk to them before they can help you with emergency support. • If you won’t talk to a pharmacist you’d better learn about pharmacokinetics and how the long half life of Efavirenz can be trouble.

More Related