when less is more: transmission of drug-resistant hiv in canada

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When Less is More: Transmission of Drug- Resistant HIV in Canada STIRRHS Conference Montreal, Quebec June 3, 2006

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When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada. STIRRHS Conference Montreal, Quebec June 3, 2006. Why do this project?. HIV challenge 5000 new cases annually Living long with HIV through HAART. 333 HIV Positive Patients. 155/191 Partners HIV Negative. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant

HIV in Canada

STIRRHS ConferenceMontreal, Quebec

June 3, 2006

Page 2: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada
Page 3: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada
Page 4: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Why do this project?

• HIV challenge

• 5000 new cases annually

• Living long with HIV through HAART

Page 5: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Who is Spreading HIV ?

75/333 (23%)Unprotected Intercourse

18/75 (24%)Drug Resistant HIV

333 HIV Positive Patients

155/191 Partners HIV Negative

Page 6: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

So what’s the problem?

• HAART regimen is demanding

• Adherence must be >95%

• 57-77% of patients cannot adhere optimally

• At 80% adherence drug resistance develops

Page 7: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Barriers to Reducing Spread

1. Drugs are not “user-friendly”

2. Adherence is not optimal

3. Not all sex is safe

Page 8: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Hypothesis

• The spread of drug-resistant HIV virus can be reduced by redesigning the strategy of treatment targeted towards one of these three pillars:– Improving adherence– Reducing the development of drug-resistance– Reducing risk sexual and drugs-associated

behaviour

Page 9: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Objectives

This collaborative group will use a transdisciplinary approach to improve patient adherence to HAART and prevent the spread of drug-resistant HIV by:– Optimizing drug combinations/delivery– Alleviating side effects to treatment– Identifying factors associated with decreased

adherence specific to the Canadian population

– Furthering “safe-sex” techniques

Page 10: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Objectives

ADHERENCETO

HAART

DEVELOPMENT OFRESISTANCE

SPREAD OFRESISTANT HIV

RISK BEHAVIOUR

Objective 1 Influence

adherence

Objective 2 Influence

development ofresistance

Objective 3 Modify

risk behaviour

Page 11: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Objective 1: Adherence

a. Understand the problems of adherence to HAART

b. Design, implement and evaluate a computer-based tool designed to improve management of drug side effects

c. To modify the influence of side-effects of therapy on drug adherence by designing alternative drug delivery methods

Page 12: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Design (1)

• Understand the problem of adherence and barriers related to HAART

• 1st year: Qualitative study: understand point of view, motivation, psychological concerns of patient and health professionals, study of barriers to therapy adherence (implementation, analysis)

Page 13: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Design (2)

• Development of an intervention

• Information-motivation-behavioural skills model

• Specific intervention…

Page 14: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Design (3)

• Stratify in three groups: <80%, 80-95% and >95% adherence to HAART

• Evaluation of intervention– RCT

Page 15: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Primary Health Outcome Measures

Level of Adherence

Level of Drug-resistant HIV

Number of New Cases of Drug-Resistant HIV

Page 16: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The Problem of Side Effects

• Cluster randomized, controlled trial

• HIV positive patients

• Clinic waiting rooms

Page 17: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The Problem of Side Effects

• Half of treatment centers will complete a computer based survey– Length of illness– Adherence to treatment– Side effect profile– Risky sexual behavior

Page 18: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The Problem of Side Effects

• The computer will provide a print out of the side effect profile

• Pharmacists will review the profile and determine the likely causal agents

• Physicians will use the information to give patients coping strategies and/or prescriptions to abate side effects

Page 19: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The Problem of Side Effects

• Additionally, the computer will provide the patient with information regarding adherence and risk of drug resistant HIV as well as decreasing transmission as the survey is being completed

• Issues can then be further discussed with the clinician

Page 20: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The Problem of Side Effects

At the completion of the study, we will compare the control and intervention groups to determine if there is a difference in adherence between the groups

Page 21: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

HAART NON-ADHERENCE RESISTANCE

SPREAD

Complex regimenToxicity Mechanisms of resistance

HIV INFECTION

Page 22: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The aims of this project are

1. to simplify drug regimen by developing new drug delivery methods

2. reduce toxicity by using newer agents

Page 23: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Complex Regimen

Three classes of drugsA, B & C : A1,B1 and C1Some in empty stomach / others in full stomachMultiple pills, large sizeToxicity

New drug delivery methods such asTransdermal patchNew combination of drugs – for example A1, B2

and C3

Page 24: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Methods to Improve Adherence

• New Drug Delivery Methods

• Transdermal patch

• Reduce toxicity

• Combination of drugs A1, B2 and C3

Page 25: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

New Drug Delivery MethodsStudy DesignRandomized control trialParticipants : non-adherent patientsThe usual oral regimen (n=50)Transdermal patch (n=50)Adherent patients (>95%) (n=50)For three months

Outcomes:Drug concentrationsViral loadCD4 countsPatient compliance – side effects

Page 26: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

New Drugs

Patients will be randomized to receive either1. A1, B1, C12. A1, B2, C3As transdermal patches

Outcomes:Side effect profileViral loadCD4 counts

Page 27: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Objective 2Mechanisms of Resistance

• Non- adherence (50%) patients

• Mutations in viral enzymes & proteins

• The aim of this study will be to elucidate the mechanisms of drug resistance to HAART

Page 28: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

• Study DesignHIV will be cultured from non-adherent (50%) patients

• Mutations in the viral enzyme and proteins to be determined using DNA

• 3-D structure of the proteins determined

Page 29: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

• In vitro cell culture studies

• to compare the efficacy of the usual and the new combinations of drugs

• To compare the development of drug resistance

Outcome:

Drug resistance – viral counts

Page 30: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

• Experimental Design• Cultured HIV will be incubated with

increasing concentrations (1uM to 1mM) of either the usual or new combinations of drugs for 24 hours to 72h

• Different regimens of failing drug adherence• At the end of treatment period perform – viral counts and examine for

mutations in HIV

Page 31: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Bench to Bedside

• RCT to compare drug resistance in the usual and the new combination of drugs

• Newly identified HIV patients will be randomized to receive either

• Usual drug combination or the new drug combinations for 1 year

• Examine viral load, CD4 counts, mutations in HIV

Page 32: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Objective 3: Reduce risk behaviour

• Assessment of risk behaviour – Survey– Correlate risk-behaviour with adherence, viral load

and resistance

• Intervention– Educate – show movie, talk to clinic nurse, doctor,

educate doctor– Provide needles and condoms

• Test intervention with questionnaire• Evaluate intervention efficiency

Page 33: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

• Objective: to reduce spread of HIV by risk behaviour

• Research design: case-control, prospective

• Primary measure of health outcome: risk behaviour after intervention

Objective 3: Reduce risk behaviour

Page 34: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada
Page 35: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

Members• HIV-positive patients and

partners• Doctors• Psychologists• Anthropologist/

Sociologist • Basic scientist/

pharmacologist, virologist• Epidemiologist• Computerperson

ContributionTo adhere or not to adhere

and behave Clinical perceptionTheoretical conceptsUnderstand determinant

factorsResistance development

studies bghjewlfbywObviousSoftware design

Team members and their contributions

Page 36: When Less is More: Transmission of Drug-Resistant HIV in Canada

The real team members

• Nils Chaillet• Li Chen• Barbra de Vrijer• Pia Elustondo• Laura Gaudet• Sownd

Sankaralingam

• Dr William Fisher• Dr Robert Platt• Dr Lise Goulet