| Literature DB >> 30577866 |
Carole Khaw1,2, Daniel Richardson3,4, Gail Matthews5, Tim Read6,7.
Abstract
Patients who are HIV-positive and co-infected with other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) are at risk of increased morbidity and mortality. This is of clinical significance. There has been a dramatic increase in the incidence of STIs, particularly syphilis, gonorrhoea, Mycoplasma genitalium and hepatitis C virus (HCV) in HIV-positive patients. The reasons for this are multifactorial, but contributing factors may include effective treatment for HIV, increased STI testing, use of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis and use of social media to meet sexual partners. The rate of syphilis-HIV co-infection is increasing, with a corresponding increase in its incidence in the wider community. HIV-positive patients infected with syphilis are more likely to have neurological invasion, causing syndromes of neurosyphilis and ocular syphilis. HIV infection accelerates HCV disease progression in co-infected patients, and liver disease is a leading cause of non-AIDS-related mortality among patients who are HIV-positive. Since several direct-acting antivirals have become subsidised in Australia, there has been an increase in treatment uptake and a decrease in HCV viraemia in HIV-positive patients. The incidence of other sexually transmitted bacterial infections such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae and M. genitalium is increasing in HIV patients, causing urethritis, proctitis and other syndromes. Increasing antimicrobial resistance has also become a major concern, making treatment of these infections challenging. Increased appropriate testing and vigilant management of these STIs with data acquisition on antimicrobial sensitivities and antimicrobial stewardship are essential to prevent ongoing epidemics and emergence of resistance. Although efforts to prevent, treat and reduce epidemics of STIs in patients living with HIV are underway, further advances are needed to reduce the significant morbidity associated with co-infection in this patient setting.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Co-infection; Gonorrhoea; HCV; HIV; Hepatitis C; Proctitis; Syphilis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30577866 PMCID: PMC6302453 DOI: 10.1186/s12981-018-0216-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Diagnostic tests for syphilis
| Approach | Method | Use | Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Direct detection | Dark ground microscopy | Require exudates and fluids from lesions | |
| Treponemal tests | EIA | Screening | Highly sensitive |
| Non-treponemal tests (against anti-cardiolipin antibodies) | VDRL | Monitor treatment response | Correlate with disease activity and treatment response |
EIA enzyme immunoassay, IgG immunoglobulin G, IgM immunoglobulin M, PCR polymerase chain reaction, TPHA Treponema pallidum haemagglutination assay, TPPA Treponema pallidum particle agglutination assay, RPR rapid plasma reagin, VDRL venereal disease research laboratory
Potential DAA/ART drug interactions
| DAA | ART | Change required |
|---|---|---|
| DCV | EFV | Increase DCV dose to 90 mg |
| DCV | NVP/ETR | Likely increase DCV dose to 90 mg (no data) |
| DCV | ATZ + EVG/COBI/FTC/TDF | Decrease DCV dose to 30 mg |
| LDV/SOF | TDF-based regimens | Use with caution, esp. if renal impairment |
| PROD | ART | Many drug interactions—do not use |
| ELB/GRZ | PIs | Contraindicated—do not use |
| ELB/GRZ | NNRTIs (except RLV) | Contraindicated—do not use |
| ELB/GRZ | EVG/COBI/FTC/TDF | Contraindicated—do not use |
| SOF/VEL | EFV | Contraindicated—do not use |
Data source: HepC Drug Interactions (http://www.hep-druginteractions.org)
ATZ atazanavir, COBI cobicistat, DCV daclatasvir, ELB elbasvir, ETR etravirine, EFV efavirenz, EVG elvitegravir, FTC emtricitabine, GRZ grazoprevir, LDV ledipasvir, NNRTIs non-nuclease reverse-transcriptase inhibitors, NVP nevirapine, PIs protease inhibitors, PROD paritaprevir/ritonavir–ombitasvir and dasabuvir, RPV rilpivarine, SOF sofosbuvir, TDF tenofovir disoproxil fumarate