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UK-CAB 22 - Background

13 July 2007

Programme

9.00-9.30
Registration and coffee

9.30-10.00
Welcome, announcements, matters arising

10.00-10.30
Conference feedback

10.30-11.15
Rapid testing in practice
Adam Wilkinson, THT

11.15-11.30
Coffee

11.30-12.15
Testing: the standard of care and some other useful tests
Matt Williams, UKCAB

12.15-12.30
Yellow Card Scheme - adverse reactions reporting)

12.30-13.45
Lunch

13.45-14.30
Viral tropism
Matt Williams and Svilen Konov, UKCAB

14.30-15.15
Monitoring HIV infection and treatment in the 2nd decade of HAART
Dr Simon Edwards, Consultant HIV/GUM Physician, Mortimer Market Centre

15.15-15.30
Tea

15.30-16.00
UK CAB business - AOB

16.00
Close

Background reading

Rapid testing in practice

Adam Wilkinson from THT will present on THT's 3+ years' experience of using rapid tests as a first screen for HIV infection.

The Heath Protection Agency document listed below is a key reference:

Towards error-free HIV diagnosis: guidelines on laboratory practice PDF 332 Kb

JV Parry et al, Health Protection Agency HIV Laboratory Diagnosis Forum, published in Commun Dis Public Health 2003; 6(4): 334-50

This covers principles of diagnostic testing and passes some comment on viral load (HIV-1 quantification). Key points from this document:

People north of the Border may be interested in this report:

Blood Borne Virus Specialist Testing Laboratories Edinburgh/Glasgow Annual Report PDF 240 kb

Testing: the standard of care and some other useful tests

CD4 count, viral load and resistance testing are basic tests. Dr Simon Edwards will talk in detail about monitoring tests in the afternoon session. The morning session will be a refresher presentation.

Useful references:

BHIVA 2005 HIV treatment guidelines for adults PDF 488 Kb

A-Z tests Aidsmap

Blood tests - CD4 (T cell) test, viral load, chem. Screen AIDSmeds

Resistance tests AIDSmeds - includes pictures of test results

Understanding resistance and resistance tests HIV i-Base

3. Yellow Card scheme

The MHRA and the Commission on Human Medicines (CHM) run the UK's adverse drug reaction reporting scheme called the Yellow Card Scheme. This receives reports of suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs) from healthcare professionals. More recently the scheme was extended to included direct reporting by patients.

MHRA - Yellow Card Scheme

The MHRA and its predecessor organisations have collected reports of suspected adverse drug reactions through the Yellow Card Scheme for over 40 years. Since the establishment of the Yellow Card Scheme over 500,000 UK reports have been collected. Yellow Card reports apply to prescription medicines, herbal remedies and over-the-counter (OTC) medicines. There is currently a special emphasis on reporting ADRs for medicines used in HIV treatment.

There are 5 Yellow Card Centres whose role focuses on follow-up of reports in their areas as this has been shown to improve follow-up rates (reporters may request follow-up by MHRA if they would prefer this):

Monitoring HIV infection and treatment in the 2nd decade of HAART

The new Bloomsbury Clinic (UCL) blood test protocol and patient information sheet was circulated on the UK CAB list (email dated 5 April 2007).

The key innovation here is - as a general but not binding rule - annual viral load for people not on treatment, and annual CD4 count for people on treatment.

Viral tropism

Tropic means movement response. [from Middle English tropik, Old French tropique, Latin tropicus, from Latin, of a turn, Greek tropikos, turning]

Viral tropism means the way the virus responds to external stimulus in order to attach to and infect cells.

Scientists studying HIV-1 discovered as early as the 1989 that different forms of HIV use different coreceptors to attach to cells. The most commonly-transmitted strains of HIV use the CCR5 coreceptor, and the most common strains that develop in late-stage infection use CXCR4. Therefore, many researchers refer to strains of HIV as follows:

R5 = HIV strains which use the CCR5 coreceptor

X4 = HIV strains which use the CXCR4 coreceptor

There are also R5X4 strains of HIV which can use either of these receptors.

Viral tropism is important for a new class of drugs called CCR5 inhbitors. These are a kind of entry inhibitor (like T-20) and stop HIV binding to cells by blocking the CCr5 coreceptor.

Viral tropism can be tested for. The tropism test that you need to take before using a CCR5 inhibitor only works if your viral load is over 500 copies/mL.

General overview

The Buzz: A New Era in HIV Treatment: The Entry Inhibitors The Body

Although a little out-of-date this has a good diagram of how coreceptors help HIV to bind to a cell's surface and an explanation of tropism.

HIV virus components and concepts

X4/R5

CCR5

CXCR4

Coreceptors

Binding

Viral tropism and HIV treatment

HIV resistance mutations common but CXCR4 rare among untreated US gay men Aidsmap

CXCR4, dual or mixed tropic HIV does not reduce response to HAART Aidsmap

Receptors, co-receptors and immunity to HIV Aidsmap

Maraviroc - new drug Aidsmap

HIV may use different coreceptors in blood and brain HIV i-Base

Maraviroc results in R5/X4 mixed/dual tropic patients: unexpected safety data shows possible immunological effect HIV i-Base

HIV tropism: diagnostic tools and implications for disease progression and treatment with entry inhibitors NATAP

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