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Prepared by the AETC National Coordinating Resource Center based on recommendations from the CDC, National Institutes of Health, and HIV Medicine Association/Infectious Diseases Society of America Guidelines for Prevention and Treatment of Opportunistic Infections in HIV-Infected Adults and Adolescents Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy Slide Set
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2 July 2013www.aidsetc.org These slides were developed using recommendations published in July 2013. The intended audience is clinicians involved in the care of patients with HIV. Certain sections have been updated to reflect changes in the published guidelines. Users are cautioned that, because of the rapidly changing field of HIV care, this information could become out of date quickly. Finally, it is intended that these slides be used as prepared, without changes in either content or attribution. Users are asked to honor this intent. – AETC National Coordinating Resource Center http://www.aidsetc.org About This Presentation
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3 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Epidemiology Clinical Manifestations Diagnosis Preventing Disease Treatment Monitoring Preventing Recurrence Considerations in Pregnancy Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy
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4 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Opportunistic infection, caused by the polyoma virus JC virus Characterized by focal demyelination in the CNS Worldwide distribution, seroprevalence of 39-69% in adults Primary infection usually in childhood No recognized acute JC virus infection Likely asymptomatic chronic carrier state PML: Epidemiology
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5 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Before use of potent ART, PML developed in 3-7% of persons with AIDS Substantially lower incidence in countries with wide access to ART High mortality rate Usually occurs with low CD4 count, but may occur with CD4 count >200 cells/μL and in those on ART Rarely occurs in HIV-uninfected immuno-compromised persons Reported in persons treated with immunomodulatory humanized antibodies (eg, natalizumab, efalizumab, infliximab, rituximab) PML: Epidemiology (2)
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6 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Focal neurologic deficits, usually with insidious onset, steady progression over several weeks/months Demyelinating lesions may involve any region of the brain Common: occipital lobes (hemianopsia), frontal and parietal lobes (aphasia, hemiparesis, hemisensory deficits), cerebellar peduncles and deep white matter (dysmetria, ataxia) Spinal cord involvement is rare Lesions often multiple, though one may predominate Headache and fever not characteristic (except in severe IRIS) Seizures in 20% Cognitive dysfunction may occur but diffuse encephalopathy or dementia is rare PML: Clinical Manifestations
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7 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Compatible clinical syndrome and radiographic findings allow presumptive diagnosis in most cases Clinical: steady progression of focal neurological deficits Imaging: MRI is preferred PML: Diagnosis
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8 July 2013www.aidsetc.org MRI distinct white matter lesions in brain areas corresponding to clinical deficits Usually hyperintense on T2 and FLAIR, hypointense on T1 Usually no mass effect Contrast enhancement in 10-15% but usually sparse IRIS PMN may have different appearance Diffusion-weighted imaging and MR spectroscopy may give additional diagnositic information CT scan: single or multiple hypodense, nonenhancing white matter lesions PML: Diagnosis (2)
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9 July 2013www.aidsetc.org PML: Diagnosis (3) Credit: Images courtesy AIDS Images Library (www.aids-images.ch)
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10 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Definitive diagnosis: valuable, especially for atypical cases CSF evaluation for JC virus DNA (by PCR): helpful if positive; 70-90% sensitive in patients who are not on ART (lower in those on ART) Brain biopsy: identification of JC virus; visualization of oligodendrocytes with intranuclear inclusions, bizarre astrocytes, lipid-laden macrophages Serologic testing generally not useful, but newer approaches under investigation PML: Diagnosis (4)
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11 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Preventing exposure No known way to prevent exposure Preventing disease ART is the only effective way to prevent PML Prevention of progressive immunosuppression caused by HIV PML: Prevention
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12 July 2013www.aidsetc.org No specific therapy Main approach: ART to reverse immune suppression Start ART immediately for those not on ART; optimize ART in all on ART without suppression of HIV viremia Effectiveness of ARVs with better CNS penetration is not established – likely that systemic efficacy is most important, via restoration of anti-JCV immunity Effective ART stops PML progression in approximately 50% Neurologic deficits often persist PML: Treatment
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13 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Targeted treatments: no proven effective therapies Cytarabine, cidofovir: studies show no clinical benefit; not recommended 5HT2a receptor inhibitors: clinical trial data lacking; cannot be recommended Interferon-alfa: no clinical benefit; cannot be recommended Topotecan: limited data; not recommended PML: Treatment (2)
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14 July 2013www.aidsetc.org ART should be started immediately upon diagnosis of PML For persons on ART with HIV viremia, optimize ART to achieve HIV suppression PML: Starting ART
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15 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Monitor treatment response with clinical exam and MRI If detectable JCV DNA in CSF before ART, may repeat quantitation of CSF JCV to assess treatment response (no clear guidelines) If stable or improving, repeat MRI 6-8 weeks after ART initiation If clinical worsening, repeat MRI promptly PML: Monitoring and Adverse Events
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16 July 2013www.aidsetc.org PML IRIS (inflammatory PML) PML may present within first weeks/months after ART initiation, associated with immune reconstitution Both unmasking of cryptic PML and paradoxical worsening of known PML may occur Features may be atypical, may include mass effect, edema, contrast enhancement on MRI, more rapid clinical course; perivascular mononuclear inflammatory infiltration on histopathology PML: Monitoring and Adverse Events (2)
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17 July 2013www.aidsetc.org IRIS management: Corticosteroids may be helpful if substantial inflammation, edema or mass effect, or clinical deterioration Dosage not established; consider starting with 3- to 5-day course of methylprednisolone 1 g IV QD, followed by prednisone 60 mg PO QD tapered over 1-6 weeks, according to clinical response Contrast-enhanced MRI at 2-6 weeks – document status of inflammation and edema ART should be continued PML: Monitoring and Adverse Events (3)
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18 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Clinical worsening and detection of JCV (without significant decrease) at 3 months Optimize ART, if detectable HIV RNA and poor CD4 response Consider unproven therapies (see “Treatment”) PML: Treatment Failure
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19 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Effective ART regimen PML: Preventing Recurrence
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20 July 2013www.aidsetc.org Diagnosis as in nonpregnant adults Treatment: optimal ART PML: Considerations in Pregnancy
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21 July 2013www.aidsetc.org http://www.aidsetc.org http://aidsinfo.nih.gov Websites to Access the Guidelines
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22 July 2013www.aidsetc.org This presentation was prepared by Susa Coffey, MD, for the AETC National Resource Center in July 2013. See the AETC NRC website for the most current version of this presentation: http://www.aidsetc.org About This Slide Set
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