+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection...

Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection...

Date post: 17-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: shona-ryan
View: 214 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
77
Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease
Transcript
Page 1: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease

Page 2: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

ObjectivesPart I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV

infection and associated clinical disease– Acute infection– HIV Basics– Whirlwind tour of opportunistic infections in

HIV/AIDS– Prevention of opportunistic infection

Part II: Overview of occupational exposure risks and management for health care workers

Page 3: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Take Home Points1) Every organ system is impacted by HIV

infection

2) Best strategy is for PREVENTION of morbidity with timely diagnosis of HIV infection and antiretroviral therapy

Page 4: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

The beginning: Acute Retroviral Syndrome (“acute HIV”)

• Up to 80% of new HIV infections present with symptoms of viral illness, many misdiagnosed (influenza, infectious mononucleosis)

• Fever, fatigue, rash, and headache• Lymphadenopathy, pharyngitis, myalgia,

arthralgia, oral candidiasis• Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea; night sweats; oral

ulcers• Duration of illness ranges from a few days to

more than 10 weeks

Page 5: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Acute retroviral syndrome rash

Page 6: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Natural history of untreated HIV infection

Pantaleo G, Graziosi C, Fauci AS. New concepts in the immunopathogenesis ofhuman immunodeficiency virus infection. N Engl J Med. 1993;328:327-35.

Page 7: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Volberding J and Deeks S, Lancet 2010;376:49-62

HIV Lifecycle and Drug Targets

Page 8: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

HIV Lifecycle and Drug Targets

Volberding J and Deeks S, Lancet 2010;376:49-62

Co-receptor inhibitors

Fusion inhibitors

Reverse transcriptase inhibitors

Integrase inhibitors

Protease inhibitors

Page 9: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Currently available antiretroviral therapy

Page 10: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Treatment regimens are much simpler today

• Fixed-drug, multi-class combination pills (one pill once daily)– Tenofovir/emtricitabine/efavirenz– Elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir

disoproxil fumarate– Emtricitabine/rilpivirine/tenofovir disoproxil

fumarate

• Once daily or twice daily regimens (3 pills once daily, 3 pills twice daily)

Page 11: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Goals of Treatment

• Reduce HIV-associated morbidity and prolong the duration and quality of survival

• Restore and preserve immunologic function

• Maximally and durably suppress plasma HIV viral load

• Prevent HIV transmission

Panel on Antiretroviral Guidelines for Adults and Adolescents. Guidelines for the use of antiretroviral agents in HIV-1-infected adults and adolescents. Department of Health and Human Services. Available at http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/ContentFiles/AdultandAdolescentGL.pdf. Section accessed 2/14/13, page D-1.

Page 12: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Who should be treated?

Panel on Antiretroviral Guidelines for Adults and Adolescents. Guidelines for the use of antiretroviral agents in HIV-1-infected adults and adolescents. Department of Health and Human Services. Available at http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/ContentFiles/AdultandAdolescentGL.pdf. Section accessed 2/14/13, page E-2.

Page 13: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Risk for opportunistic infectionCD4 Count Level of

CompromiseInfections Neoplasms

>500 cells/mm3 Minimal Solid organ, skin cancers

200-499 cells/mm3 Minimal-Moderate Tuberculosis, bacterial pneumonia, sinusitis, seborrhea, oral candidiasis, acute diarrhea

Solid organ, skin cancers

100-200 cells/mm3 Moderate PCP, chronic diarrhea, toxoplasmosis, esophageal candidiasis

Kaposi’s sarcoma, lymphoma

<50 cells/mm3 Severe CMV, MAC

Page 14: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

A Whirlwind Tour of Infections in HIV/AIDS

Page 15: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#1: Dermatologic Infectious Manifestations of HIV/AIDS

Local Bacterial

Disseminated Bacterial

Superficial Fungal

Disseminated Fungal

Viral and Parasitic

Staph aureus folliculitis or abscessImpetigoCellulitisPseudomonas

Bartonella (bacillary angiomatosis)Atypical mycobacteria(MAC)

CandidaDermatophytes

CryptococcusCoccidiodesHistoplasmosisPenicilliosis

HSVVZVHPV

Scabies

Page 16: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Disseminated bacterial: Bacillary angiomatosis

Page 17: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Disseminated Fungal: Cryptococcus

Page 18: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Local Bacterial: staph aureus (MRSA) skin abscess

Page 19: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Viral: Herpes simplex

Page 20: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Viral: Dermatomal herpes zoster (varicella)

Page 21: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Norwegian Scabies

Page 22: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Important Non-infectious Dermatologic Manifestations

• Seborrheic dermatitis

• Eosinophilic folliculitis

• Drug hypersensitivity

• Kaposi’s sarcoma (sort of infectious…HHV-8)

Page 23: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Seborrheic dermatitis

Page 24: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Eosinophilic folliculitis

Page 25: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Drug hypersensitivity

Page 26: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Kaposi’s sarcoma

Page 27: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Kaposi Sarcoma

Page 28: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Kaposi Sarcoma

Page 29: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#2: Oral manifestations of HIV/AIDS

Infectious Non-Infectious

Oral candidiasis (thrush)Necrotizing gingivitis Herpes simplex virusCMVOral hairy leukoplakia (Epstein-Barr Virus)

Aphthous UlcersKaposi’s sarcomaOther Malignancies

Page 30: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Oral candidiasis (thrush)

Page 31: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Oral hairy leukoplakia (EBV)

Page 32: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Herpes simplex

Page 33: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Aphthous Ulcers

Page 34: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#3: Gastrointestinal Manifestations of HIV/AIDS

Page 35: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Esophagitis: Candida

Page 36: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Diarrhea: Parasites (cyclospora, cryptosporidium, isospora)

Page 37: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Colitis: Cytomegalovirus

Normal Colon

Page 38: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#4: PneumoniaBACTERIAL MYCO-

BACTERIAFUNGAL VIRAL OTHER

Pneumococcus TB PCP (P. jirovecii) Influenza KS

H flu MAC Cryptococcus CMV (pneumonitis)

Lymphoid Interstitial Pneumonia

PseudomonasandOther gram negative bacteria

Others (M. kansasii, fortuitum, gordonae)

HistoplasmosisCoccidiodes

Other (meta-pneumovirus, bocavirus, RSV, parainfluenza, etc)

Staph aureus (MRSA)

Aspergillus

Page 39: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Bacterial: Pneumococcal pneumonia

Page 40: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Fungal: Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP)

Page 41: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Pneumocystis Pneumonia

Page 42: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Malignancy: Kaposi’s sarcoma in airway

Page 43: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Tuberculosis

Page 44: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

The Global TB Problem

UNAIDS 2008

Page 45: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#5: Ophthalmic

Bacterial Viral Fungal Parasitic

Syphilis (chorio-retinitis/keratitis)

Herpes (HSV)& zoster (VZV) keratitis

Candida Toxoplasmosis

Staph and others (endoph-thalmitis)

CMV (retinitis)

Cryptococcus

Microsporidium

HIV (retino-pathy)

Pneumo-cystis

Page 46: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Viral: CMV retinitis

Page 47: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Parasitic: Toxoplasma chorioretinitis

Page 48: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#6: Neurologic

Bacterial Viral Fungal Parasitic Other

Meningitis Aseptic meningitis

Cryptococcal meningitis

Toxoplasmosis CNS Lymphoma

Brain abscess Encephalitis:CMVHSVVZV

Aspergillus Neuropathy

Neurosyphilis PML (JC virus) CoccidioidesHistoplasmosis

Primary brain tumor

TB (meningitis,tuberculoma)

HIV (encephalo-pathy/dementia)

Page 49: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.
Page 50: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Parasitic: Toxoplasma encephalitis

Page 51: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Viral: Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (JC virus)

Page 52: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Malignancy: CNS Lymphoma

Page 53: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#7: Hematologic

• Bone Marrow Issues– Anemia (HIV, antiretrovirals,

infectionsParvovirus B19, MAC, TB)– Thrombocytopenia=low platelets (HIV,

immune mediated)– Leukopenia=low white cell count (HIV,

infections)

Page 54: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

#8: Oncologic

• Kaposi’s sarcoma: human herpes virus-8 (HHV-8 = KSHV)

• Lymphoma (some Epstein Barr Virus-related)

• Cervical cancer, anorectal cancer (HPV)

• Basal cell carcinoma, melanoma

• Solid organ: colon and lung

Page 55: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Non-AIDS Defining Cancers Rising in the HAART Era

Crum-Clanflone et al, AIDS 2009;23:41-50

Page 56: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Prophylaxis of Infection in HIV

• Primary prophylaxis: A method of regularly scheduled medications to prevent episodes of infection before they occur

• Secondary prophylaxis: Preventive treatment for a subsequent occurrence (relapse) of a disease/infection

Page 57: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Primary Prophylaxis

Infection CD4 Threshold Medication

PCP <200 cells/uL Bactrim or dapsone or atovaquone

Toxoplasmosis <100 cells/uL and seropositive

Bactrim or dapsone+pyrimethamine+leucovorin

Tuberculosis Any CD4 count if PPD+ Isoniazid or rifampin

MAC <50 cells/uL Azithromycin or clarithromycin

Coccidioidomycosis <250 cells/uL and positive serology

Fluconazole or itraconazole

Histoplasmosis <150 cells/uL and from endemic area

Itraconzole

Page 58: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Secondary prophylaxis

• PCP, toxoplasma, CMV, cryptococcus, MAC, VZV and HSV for recurrent outbreaks or disseminated disease

• For life or until “immune reconstitution”

• Long term toxicities and adherence of prophylactic medications often problematic

Page 59: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/contentfiles/lvguidelines/adult_oi_041009.pdf

Page 60: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Additional preventive measures: Immunization

• Influenza, Streptococcus pneumoniae (Pneumovax, Prevnar)

• Hepatitis A, B

• Tetanus/diptheria/pertussis

• In general, no vaccination with live virus vaccines (nasal Flumist, others)

Page 61: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Health Maintenance

• Yearly or twice-yearly pap smears for women/anal pap smears for men

• Skin checks (skin cancer surveillance)• Monitoring of lipids, fasting glucose, weight• Diet/exercise• Colonoscopy• Mammogram• Smoking Cessation• Drug, alcohol counseling• Psych/Mood assessment

Aberg et al, Primary Care Guidelines for the Management of Persons Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus: 2009 Update by HIVMA/IDSA, CID 2009; 49 (5): 651-681.

Page 62: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.
Page 63: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.
Page 64: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.
Page 65: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Occupational Exposures to HIV

Page 66: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

HIV and Healthcare Workers: Who is at risk?

• Employees, students, contractors, clinicians, nurses, pharmacists, public-safety workers, or volunteers whose activities involve contact with patients or with blood or other body fluids from patients in a health-care, laboratory, or public-safety setting

Page 67: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Exposures

• Percutaneous injury (e.g., a needlestick or cut with a sharp object)

• Contact of mucous membrane or nonintact skin (e.g., exposed skin that is chapped, abraded, or with dermatitis) with blood, tissue, or other body fluids that are potentially infectious

Page 68: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Risk of Transmission

Page 69: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Risk of Infection• Percutaneous exposure to HIV-infected

blood 0.3% (95% CI = 0.2%--0.5%)• Mucous membrane exposure 0.09% (95%

CI = 0.006%--0.5%) • Risk increased with:

– exposure to a larger quantity of blood:• a device visibly contaminated with the patient's

blood • procedure involving a needle being placed directly

in a vein or artery• deep injury

– exposure to blood from source persons with advanced HIV (likely due to high viral load)

Page 70: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Testing source and exposed patient

• Source patient: – Unknown HIV status and available for testing: rapid

ELISA for HIV antibodies, HBsAg, HCV antibody– If at risk for recent HIV or HCV infection nucleic

acid-based testing to r/o acute infection

• Exposed patient– Baseline HIV, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C testing– Follow-up ELISA for HIV Ab at 4-6 weeks, 3 months,

and 6 months after exposure– Risk reduction counseling

Page 71: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Postexposure prophylaxis (PEP)

• Consider risks vs benefits

• Toxicities: mild intolerances, severe, life-threatening reactions, especially liver failure with nevirapine

• Selection of viral resistance

• Pregnancy: teratogenicity, toxicities (avoid ddI and d4T)

Page 72: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Timing of PEP

• PEP should be initiated as soon as possible after risk assessed, within 24 hours ideally

• Up to 72 hours is reasonable, but efficacy is diminished

• All women of reproductive age should have a pregnancy test prior to PEP

Page 73: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

PEP REGIMENS • Source status unknown

– Administer PEP for 28 days, if tolerated. – If a source person is determined to be HIV-

negative, PEP should be discontinued. • Source status confirmed

– Basic regimen for low risk: 2 nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs)

– Expanded 3-drug regimen for high risk: Protease inhibitor (often ritonavir-boosted) or raltegravir plus 2 NRTIs

• Monitor toxicity, counsel and educate, re-test for up to 12 months after exposure

Page 74: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

PEP for Percutaneous Exposure

U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines, MMWR 2005, Vol 54, RR-9

Page 75: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

PEP Mucous Membrane Exposure

U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines, MMWR 2005, Vol 54, RR-9

Page 76: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

Take Home Points

1) Every organ system is impacted by HIV infection

1) Best strategy is for PREVENTION of morbidity with timely diagnosis of HIV infection and antiretroviral therapy– As well as primary and secondary prophylaxis

Page 77: Clinical Aspects of HIV Disease. Objectives Part I: Overview of clinical aspects of HIV infection and associated clinical disease –Acute infection –HIV.

The impact of prevention…


Recommended