Revised
European HIV Treatment Guidelines Emphasize Management of
Age-related Non-AIDS Conditions and Coinfections
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| SUMMARY:
The European AIDS Clinical Society (EACS) released
updated HIV treatment guidelines last week at
the group's annual conference in Cologne. According
to the new recommendations, HIV positive adults
should begin antiretroviral therapy (ART) when
their CD4 cell count falls to 350 cells/mm3, but
may benefit from starting sooner. The new guidelines
place more emphasis on screening and management
of chronic age-related conditions such as cardiovascular
disease and neurocognitive impairment, as well
as treatment of co-existing diseases including
hepatitis B and C and tuberculosis. |
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By
Liz Highleyman
The
latest European guidelines, like the current
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) guidelines,
reflect the shift toward earlier therapy, as studies increasingly
point to detrimental
effects of even low-level HIV replication, well before
the CD4 count falls into the "danger zone" for
opportunistic infections (below 200 cells/mm3).
The
EACS guidelines -- last updated in 2007 -- now recommend
that people with HIV should initiate treatment before their
CD4 count falls below 350 cells/mm3, and indicate that it
may be beneficial to start as early as 500 cells/mm3. This
is similar to the DHHS guidelines, which recommend treatment
as soon as the CD4 count falls below 350 cells/mm3 and state
that "[t]he optimal time to initiate therapy in asymptomatic
patients with CD4 count > 350 cells/mm3 is not well defined."
Furthermore,
the new European guidelines recommend that certain groups
of HIV positive people should start ART within the 350-500
cells/mm3 range, including those with hepatitis C virus
(HCV) coinfection, hepatitis B virus (HBV) coinfection requiring
treatment, and HIV-associated nephropathy (kidney disease).
Research
has shown that HCV-related liver disease progresses less
rapidly in people with well-preserved immune function. Treating
hepatitis B with dually active agents (e.g., tenofovir
[Viread]) as part of a complete ART regimen can help
prevent drug resistance. The DHHS guidelines recommend ART
regardless of CD4 count for people with HIV/HBV coinfection
and kidney disease, but not HIV/HCV coinfection.
The
European guidelines also suggest that treatment should be
considered below 500 cells/mm3 for people at greater risk
for disease progression or poor response to therapy -- including
individuals over 50 years old, those with high viral load
(>100,000 copies/mL), and those with rapid CD4 cell decline
(>50-100 cells/mm3 per year) -- as well as people
with cancer or elevated cardiovascular disease risk.
The
EACS guidelines advise that pregnant women should consider
ART within the 350-500 cells/mm3 range. The U.S. guidelines,
in contrast, recommend that all pregnant women should be
treated regardless of CD4 count, based on the finding that
combination therapy -- rather than use of specific single
drugs such as zidovudine
(AZT, Retrovir) to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission
-- provides more benefit for the pregnant woman's health
and lessens the risk of drug resistance.
While
people with a CD4 count above 500 cells/mm3 generally do
not need to start treatment, the guidelines state that ART
"can be offered on an individual basis, especially
if patient is seeking and ready for ARV therapy." In
presenting the guidelines, panel members noted that this
could be applicable to HIV positive individuals with HIV
negative partners, reflecting a growing emphasis on "treatment
as prevention." The chances
of HIV transmission are dramatically reduced if the
positive partner takes ART and maintains an undetectable
viral load.
With
regard to which drugs to use for first-line ART, the new
guidelines add ritonavir-boosted darunavir
(Prezista) and boosted atazanavir
(Reyataz) as recommended agents, with boosted fosamprenavir
(Lexiva) and the integrase inhibitor raltegravir
(Isentress) as alternatives. The guidelines also include
recommendations for when to switch regimens -- for example,
to reduce side effects or increase convenience -- in people
with undetectable viral load.
The
updated guidelines provide in-depth recommendations for
screening, prevention, and treatment of several non-AIDS
conditions that commonly affect people living with HIV,
especially as they reach older ages. These include: