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Therapy with newer, safer antiretrovirals an option for the majority of HIV-positive patients
Michael Carter, 2014-07-11 08:20:00

The majority of patients taking antiretroviral therapy (ART) that includes drugs associated with long-term side-effects may have the option of switching to a novel regimen that uses newer and safer anti-HIV drugs, according to Australian research published in PLOS One. The single-site study showed that up to 89% of patients had the option of changing to a combination that includes three active newer agents with improved safety and side-effect profiles.

The drugs associated with long-term side-effects evaluated in this study comprise the core antiretroviral drugs prescribed to the majority of people taking antiretroviral treatment today.

But the authors acknowledge “most of the regimens considered as ‘viable’ in this study have not been rigorously tested in clinical trials and might be regarded as unconventional.” Nevertheless, they stress “the growing interest in testing novel combinations of ART agents, which exclude nucleoside(tide) and older non-nucleoside reverser transcriptase inhibitors (N(t)RTIs and NNRTIs, respectively), as well as ritonavir (booster dose).”

Most patients taking HIV therapy have an excellent life expectancy. However, there is concern about the safety and tolerability of many routinely used anti-HIV drugs. Investigators at St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, Australia, called these the “RATE” drugs: ritonavir (Norvir), which is associated with drug interactions, diarrhoea and lipid disturbances; abacavir (Ziagen), which can involve a hypersensitivity reaction, has reduced potency at higher viral loads and may involve a risk of cardiovascular disease; tenofovir (Viread), which can cause bone and kidney problems; and efavirenz (Sustiva), associated with neuropsychiatric side-effects and increased lipids. Moreover, these drugs are usually used in combination, compounding their toxicity profiles.

A number of alternative antiretroviral drugs have recently become available that appear to be safer and more tolerable than the RATE drugs. These include rilpivirine (Edurant), etravirine (Intelence), atazanavir (Reyataz), raltegravir (Isentress), maraviroc (Celsentri or Selzentry), and also the older NRTI lamivudine (Epivir).

Investigators wanted to assess the proportion of patients taking current RATE regimens who could potentially switch to a viable RATE-sparing regimen.

The authors examined the treatment history and resistance profiles of 120 patients receiving therapy containing two or more RATE drugs at St Vincent’s Hospital. For each patient, the investigators calculated the potential activity of newer, alternative drugs.

The patients had been taking antiretroviral therapy for a median of eight years and 17% had a history of exposure to the integrase inhibitor raltegravir.

Tropism testing – which can predict susceptibility to maraviroc – was unavailable for 54% of individuals and unsuccessful for 8% of patients.

Assuming that patients with unknown maraviroc activity were susceptible to the drug, then 98% had an option of at least one RATE-sparing regimen with two active drugs, with 89% able to construct a regimen with three newer drugs. The proportions decreased to 94% and 87%, respectively, assuming maraviroc inactivity when susceptibility to the drug was unknown.

A literature review provided evidence supporting the viability of many of the RATE-sparing regimens. The only exception was regimens that combined raltegravir with drugs with a low genetic barrier to resistance.

Analysis of the nationally representative Australian HIV Observational Cohort (AHOD) showed that 57% of patients were taking regimens that included two or more RATE agents and could therefore potentially benefit by switching to a non-RATE regimen.

“Our analysis of patients in one hospital-based clinic suggests that most patients receiving >2 RATE agents would be expected to have at least one viable RATE-sparing regimen switch option containing 2 or 3 fully-active agents,” write the authors. “This remained the case when we restricted our assessment to only those regimen options which have shown promise in publically presented studies.”

They believe there is a “clear need for trials to rigorously evaluate RATE-sparing regimens, not only to demonstrate their virological success but also their expected greater tolerability and safety.” The investigators suggest such a study should target patients with a high risk of chronic illness who would therefore most benefit from RATE-sparing therapy.  

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