Aims
To compare steady‐state nelfinavir (NFV) pharmacokinetics in pregnant and nonpregnant HIV‐infected women.
Methods
Twenty‐five pregnant HIV‐infected women were selected from an ongoing ...observational study evaluating the pharmacokinetics of antiretroviral agents during pregnancy. Twenty of them were in the third and five in the second trimester. Data for the control group of 21 HIV‐infected nonpregnant women were taken from a previous multicentre pharmacokinetic trial. All the participating women achieved steady‐state plasma concentrations while on a highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimen including NFV (1250 mg bid) and two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). Blood samples for NFV measurement were collected predose (Ctrough) and at 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 12 h post dose.
Results
During the third trimester of pregnancy NFV AUC0−12 h median (range) values were 25.76 (12.61–42.74) µg h−1 ml−1, and were 32.49 (19.16–63.81) µg h−1 ml−1 in the control group mean difference − 9.30 µg h−1 ml−1; 95% confidence interval (CI) −15.76, −2.83; P < 0.05). Median oral clearance (CL/F) was significantly higher in pregnant women than in the control group (48.5 l h−1, range 29.3–99.1 l h−1 vs. 38.5 l h−1, range 19.6–65.2 l h−1; mean difference 12.6 l h−1; 95% CI 3.3, 21.9) but the difference disappeared when CL/F was adjusted for body weight. Ctrough was significantly (P < 0.01) lower in pregnant compared with nonpregnant women (median 0.8 µg ml−1, range 0–2.6 µg ml−1 vs. 1.5 µg ml−1, range 0.5–4.9 µg ml−1; mean difference −1.0 µg ml−1; 95% CI −1.7, −0.31). The median elimination half‐life of NFV observed during pregnancy was 3.7 h (range 1.4–6.6 h), compared with 5.2 (range 3.1–10.1 h) in the control group (mean difference −1.7; 95% CI −2.8, −0.51).
Conclusions
Our results indicate that women in the later stages of pregnancy may be exposed to subtherapeutic concentrations of NFV. Thus, adjustments in drug dosage or frequency of administration may be required.
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the impact on human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) tropism of uncontrolled virus exposure during 2 years of intermittent highly active antiretroviral ...therapy (HAART). The Istituto Superiore di Sanità-Pulsed Antiretroviral Therapy (ISS-PART) randomized study compared the outcome of 2 years of structured treatment interruptions (STIs) versus standard continuous treatment in first-line HAART responder subjects. The STI schedule consisted of five STIs of 1, 1, 2, 2, and 3 months, respectively, separated by four periods of 3-month therapy. In the present study, coreceptor tropism was assessed in 12 patients of the STI arm at different time points over a period of 2 years. Tropism was determined on DNA and RNA by V3 loop region sequencing. The Geno2pheno algorithm (false-positive rate, FPR: 20 %) was used for data interpretation. At baseline, 9/12 subjects (75.0 %) had CCR5-tropic viruses in their HIV. Three had a CXCR4-tropic virus. Ten patients maintained the same coreceptor in DNA after 2 years, whereas in two patients, a shift occurred (one R5–X4, one X4–R5). In a patient with an R5 virus at baseline, a transient change to X4 tropism was seen in the rebounding virus during STI. Changes in tropism were not associated with the amplitude and duration of virus exposure during STIs, residual viremia at baseline, or the development of resistance mutations in the RT region. Our preliminary results suggest that viral replication, observed after short periods of treatment interruption, is not enough to drive the evolution of HIV tropism.
Atazanavir and darunavir represent the main HIV PIs recommended in pregnancy, but comparative data in pregnant women are limited. We assessed the safety and activity profile of these two drugs in ...pregnancy using data from a national observational study.
Women with atazanavir or darunavir exposure in pregnancy were evaluated for laboratory measures and main pregnancy outcomes (e.g. preterm delivery, low birthweight, non-elective caesarean section and neonatal gestational age-adjusted birthweight Z-score).
Final analysis included 500 pregnancies with either atazanavir (n = 409) or darunavir (n = 91) exposure. No differences in pregnancy outcomes, weight gain in pregnancy, drug discontinuations, undetectable HIV-RNA, haemoglobin, ALT, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and LDL cholesterol were observed between the two groups. At third trimester, exposure to darunavir was associated with higher levels of plasma triglycerides (median 235.5 versus 179 mg/dL; P = 0.032) and a higher total cholesterol/HDL cholesterol ratio (median 4.03 versus 3.27; P = 0.028) and exposure to atazanavir was associated with higher levels of plasma bilirubin (1.54 versus 0.32 mg/dL; P < 0.001).
In this observational study, the two main HIV PIs currently recommended by perinatal guidelines showed similar safety and activity in pregnancy, with no evidence of differences between the two drugs in terms of main pregnancy outcomes. Based on the minor differences observed in laboratory measures, prescribing physicians might prefer either drug in some particular situations where the different impacts of treatment on lipid profile and bilirubin may have clinical relevance.
Summary
The study included 309 HIV‐infected pregnant women receiving a lamivudine‐containing antiretroviral regimen from week 25 of gestational age until 6 months postpartum, during breastfeeding. ...Twenty‐seven of them (8.7%) were hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) positive; at baseline, hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA levels >3 log10 IU/mL (with a median level of 6.2 log10 IU/mL) were found in 10 women, who at one, three and six months postpartum had median levels of 5.2 log10 IU/mL, 4.5 log10 IU/mL and 2.8 log10 IU/mL, respectively. Twenty‐four of the 30 breast milk samples evaluated had undetectable HBV DNA and the other six had values between 15 and 155 IU/mL. Median lamivudine concentrations were 1070 ng/mL in serum and 684 ng/mL in breast milk. Among the 24 HBV‐exposed children with available samples, 16 always tested negative, four had a transient infection, one had an undetermined status and three (12.5%) first tested positive at Month 12 or Month 24. Among the children born to the HBV‐uninfected mothers of the same cohort, the rate of HBsAg positivity at 12–24 months was 2% (4/196). Our finding of the absence of significative levels of HBV DNA in the breast milk of co‐infected mothers supports the present recommendations for breastfeeding in HBV‐infected women. Horizontal transmission can be hypothesized for the infections detected in children at 12–24 months. Children born to HBV‐positive mothers remained at higher risk of postnatal HBV acquisition compared to those born to HBV‐negative women.
In this case report, we examine the impact of a simplified two-drug highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimen of raltegravir and lamivudine in a patient co-infected with human ...immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C, D and B viruses (HCV/HDV/HBV) under immunosuppressive therapy after liver transplantation. Pharmacokinetic interactions between integrase inhibitors and immunosuppressant drugs are described. Raltegravir, the first integrase inhibitor, associated with lamivudine, was introduced because its metabolism does not interfere with immunosuppressant therapy. During post-orthotopic liver transplantation follow-up, the patient's transaminases level increased and his antiretroviral therapy (HAART) of tenofovir/emtricitabine and fosamprenavir was changed, due to suspected drug toxicity. After seven months of follow-up, the patient showed good tolerance, good viro-immunological control with undetectable HIV viraemia and stable concentrations of immunosuppressive drugs. This case indicates that the combination of raltegravir and lamivudine is an optimal and effective strategy because it resulted in an important reduction of hepatic transaminases in a patient with very critical clinical conditions.
To determine factors associated with < 2.5 copies/ml plasma HIV RNA in subjects treated with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) and with viraemia < 50 copies/ml.
Cross-sectional analysis of ...84 HIV-positive patients taking HAART with plasma HIV RNA < 50 copies/ml for at least 6 months and no history of virological failure.
Current HAART therapy was based on a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) in 66%, a protease inhibitor in 26% and nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors in 7%. Viraemia levels were measured using a modified ultrasensitive Roche Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor test able to quantify plasma HIV RNA to a lower limit of 2.5 copies /ml; proviral DNA was measured with a real-time polymerase chain reaction assay. Analysis of variance and multiple logistic regression analysis were utilized to test for associations between residual replication and other variables.
Residual HIV viraemia > 2.5 copies/ml was found in 50% of subjects; 94% of subjects had detectable proviral DNA (>or= 20 copies/10(6) peripheral blood mononuclear cells) and 21% had archived mutations. Usage of a NNRTI-based HAART was the only independent predictor of viral suppression below the cut-off value of the modified ultrasensitive assay.
In our population, NNRTI-based HAART seems to have a stronger impact on residual replication than protease inhibitor-based HAART. This finding may be considered in therapeutic decisions such as the choice of initial HAART regimen and the interruption or simplification of treatment.
We evaluated rates and determinants of virological failure in triple-class experienced patients receiving raltegravir-based regimens from a national observational study over 48 weeks, defined by any ...one of the following: (1) no HIV-RNA suppression to undetectable levels (<50 copies/mL) during follow-up; (2) detectable viral load after obtaining undetectable levels; and (3) leaving the study before 48 weeks. Among 101 eligible patients, 26 (25.7%; 95% CI 17.2-34.2) had virological failure. No significant differences between patients with and without virological failure were observed for gender, age, route of transmission, baseline CD4/HIV-RNA, CDC group, hepatitis B or C co-infections, resistance (based on the last genotype available), type and number of concomitant drug classes, concomitant use of darunavir, atazanavir, etravirine, enfuvirtide or maraviroc, and health-related quality-of-life measures. A high rate of treatment response was observed. The analyses did not identify any baseline factor associated with failure, including resistance status. Even if we cannot exclude the presence of pre-existing minority resistant variants not captured by genotypic tests, the lack of baseline predictors of failure suggests the need to monitor patients closely during follow up for other factors, such as potential drug interactions and reduced levels of adherence, which may favour virological failure.
Objectives
Simplified methods for virological monitoring in resource-limited settings are increasingly needed. We evaluated the performance of the VERSANT® HIV-1 RNA (kPCR) assay for the ...determination of HIV-1 viral load from dried blood spots (DBS). Assay sensitivity and correlation with plasma quantification values were assessed.
Methods
A total of 98 DBS were prepared from fresh blood samples of HIV-infected patients. DBS were kept at room temperature for 6 weeks or 7 months before processing while the corresponding plasma samples were stored at −80°C. DBS were first pre-treated in a special DBS buffer. The DBS extracts and the plasma samples were then purified and amplified using the VERSANT assay reagents.
Results
In the first series of tests, performed after 6 weeks of storage, there was good correlation between quantification of viral load in plasma and in DBS (r = 0.95, P < 0.001). The detection rate in DBS was 100% when plasma levels were >1000 copies/mL. The sensitivity and specificity of the DBS assay were 88.2% 95% confidence interval (CI) 79.4-93.6 and 69.2% (95% CI 42.0-87.4), respectively. Using the 5000 copies/mL threshold (defining virological failure in resource-limited settings), both positive and negative predictive values were high (95.2% and 87.5%, respectively). After 7 months of storage there was a modest decrease in the detection rate and less significant correlations for samples with HIV-RNA <5000 copies/mL.
Conclusions
Quantification of HIV-RNA from DBS by the VERSANT automated sample preparation and detection method can be used to diagnose virological failure in HIV-positive patients.