| Literature DB >> 35205734 |
Isabelle Poizot-Martin1, Sylvie Brégigeon2, Romain Palich3, Anne-Geneviève Marcelin4, Marc-Antoine Valantin3, Caroline Solas5, Marianne Veyri6, Jean-Philippe Spano6, Alain Makinson7.
Abstract
People living with HIV (PLWH) with advanced immunosuppression who initiate antiretroviral therapy (ART) are susceptible to the occurrence of an immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS). Although ART is responsible for AIDS- associated Kaposi sarcoma (KS) improvement and resolution, new onset (unmasking KS-IRIS) or sudden progression of preexisting KS (paradoxical KS-IRIS) can occur after a time delay of between a few days and 6 months after the initiation or resumption of ART, even in patients with a low degree of immunocompromise. KS-IRIS incidence varies from 2.4% to 39%, depending on study design, populations, and geographic regions. Risk factors for developing KS-IRIS include advanced KS tumor stage (T1), pre-treatment HIV viral load >5 log10 copies/mL, detectable pre-treatment plasma-KSHV, and initiation of ART alone without concurrent chemotherapy. Both paradoxical and unmasking KS-IRIS have been associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and thrombocytopenia (<100,000 platelets/mm3 at 12 weeks) has been associated with death. KS-IRIS is not to be considered as ART failure, and an ART regimen must be pursued. Systemic chemotherapy for KS in conjunction with ART is recommended and, in contrast with management of IRIS for other opportunistic infections, glucocorticoids are contra-indicated. Despite our preliminary results, the place of targeted therapies in the prevention or treatment of KS-IRIS needs further assessment.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV; IRIS; Kaposi sarcoma; immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome; target therapies
Year: 2022 PMID: 35205734 PMCID: PMC8869819 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14040986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
General IRIS case definitions.
| According to French et al., 2004 [ | |
|---|---|
| Diagnosis Requires Two Major Criteria (A+B) or Major Criterion (A) Plus Two Minor Criteria to Be Fulfilled | |
| Major criteria | Minor criteria |
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Atypical presentation of opportunistic infections or tumors in patients responding to ART |
Increase in blood CD4 T-cell count after starting ART |
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Localized disease Exaggerated inflammatory reaction Atypical inflammatory response in affected tissues Progressive organ dysfunction or enlargement of pre-existing lesions after definite clinical improvement with pathogen-specific therapy before the initiation of ART and exclusion of treatment toxicity and new alternative diagnoses |
Increase in an immune response specific to the relevant pathogen—e.g., delayed type hypersensitivity skin test response to mycobacterial antigens |
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Decrease in plasma HIV RNA concentration by more than 1 log10 copies per mL |
Spontaneous resolution of disease without specific antimicrobial therapy or tumor chemotherapy with continuation of ART |
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HIV-infected patient Receiving effective ART as evidenced by a decrease in HIV-[ Clinical symptoms consistent with inflammatory process Clinical course not consistent with expected course of previously diagnosed opportunistic infection, expected course of newly diagnosed opportunistic infection, or drug toxicity | |
Staging classification for AIDS-related KS (Krown et al., 1989) [107].
| Criteria | Good Risk (All of the Following) | Poor Risk (Any of the Following) |
|---|---|---|
| Tumor, T | T0: confined to the skin and/or lymph nodes and/or minimal oral disease (non-nodular KS confined to palate) | T1: Tumor-associated edema or ulceration |
| Immune system, I 1 | I0: CD4 T-cell count ≥150/mm3 | I1: CD4T cell <150/mm3 |
| Systemic disease, S | S0: No history of opportunistic infection or thrush | S1: History of opportunistic infection and/or thrush |
1 I stage has less prognostic value than T or S stages in the presence of ART therapy 2 “B” symptoms are unexplained fever, night sweats, >10 percent involuntary weight loss, or diarrhea persisting more than two weeks.
Disease progression criteria according to ACTG response criteria (Krown et al., 1989) [107].
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An increase of 25% or more in the size of previously existing lesions The appearance of new lesions or new sites of disease A change in the character of 25% or more of the skin or oral lesions from macular to plaque-like or nodular The development of new or increasing tumor- associated edema or effusions |