Literature DB >> 16148846

Ritonavir-based highly active antiretroviral therapy in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected infants younger than 24 months of age.

Ellen Gould Chadwick1, John H Rodman, Paula Britto, Christine Powell, Paul Palumbo, Katherine Luzuriaga, Michael Hughes, Elaine J Abrams, Patricia M Flynn, William Borkowsky, Ram Yogev.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Few data are available regarding clinical outcomes or dosing requirements for the protease inhibitor ritonavir in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected children younger than under 24 months of age.
METHODS: This prospective, multicenter phase I/II open label treatment trial used ritonavir, zidovudine and lamivudine to treat protease inhibitor-naive, HIV-infected infants between the ages of 4 weeks and 24 months. Two sequential dosing cohorts were treated with 350 or 450 mg/m(2) ritonavir every 12 hours; this report includes results of pharmacokinetics, safety, tolerability and efficacy through 104 weeks of follow-up of all subjects.
RESULTS: Fifty HIV-infected children were treated. By week 16, 36 had achieved HIV-1 RNA <400 copies/mL (72% intent-to-treat, 84% as-treated analysis); by week 104, 18 maintained durable viral suppression (36% intent-to-treat, 46% as-treated). Poor medication adherence by caregiver report contributed to virologic failure. Few subjects experienced treatment-limiting toxicity: emesis or ritonavir refusal in 6 (12%); and severe but reversible anemia or elevated serum hepatic transaminases in 1 (4%) each. Apparent oral clearance was higher and the median predose concentrations were substantially lower than those found in adults. Median z scores for weight and height for age/gender were below normal at baseline but improved by week 104.
CONCLUSIONS: A combination regimen of ritonavir, zidovudine and lamivudine was generally safe and produced sustained viral suppression in more than one-third of infants who initiated therapy before 2 years of age. Improved palatability of liquid preparations of protease inhibitors, supporting infrastructure and behavioral approaches to improve medication adherence with antiretrovirals will likely be necessary to further improve efficacy.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16148846     DOI: 10.1097/01.inf.0000177281.93658.df

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J        ISSN: 0891-3668            Impact factor:   2.129


  16 in total

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Authors:  Katherine Luzuriaga; Barbara Tabak; Manuel Garber; Ya Hui Chen; Carrie Ziemniak; Margaret M McManus; Danielle Murray; Matthew C Strain; Douglas D Richman; Tae-Wook Chun; Coleen K Cunningham; Deborah Persaud
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4.  Initial response to protease-inhibitor-based antiretroviral therapy among children less than 2 years of age in South Africa: effect of cotreatment for tuberculosis.

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7.  Early initiation of lopinavir/ritonavir in infants less than 6 weeks of age: pharmacokinetics and 24-week safety and efficacy.

Authors:  Ellen Gould Chadwick; Jorge Pinto; Ram Yogev; Carmelita G Alvero; Michael D Hughes; Paul Palumbo; Brian Robbins; Rohan Hazra; Leslie Serchuck; Barbara E Heckman; Lynette Purdue; Renee Browning; Katherine Luzuriaga; John Rodman; Edmund Capparelli
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8.  Development of dual-class antiretroviral drug resistance in a child coinfected with HIV and tuberculosis: a case report from KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

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9.  Treatment of pediatric HIV infection.

Authors:  Elisa A d'Oulx; Elena Chiappini; Maurizio de Martino; Pier-Angelo Tovo
Journal:  Curr Infect Dis Rep       Date:  2007-09       Impact factor: 3.725

10.  Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome among HIV-infected South African infants initiating antiretroviral therapy.

Authors:  Kelly Smith; Louise Kuhn; Ashraf Coovadia; Tammy Meyers; Chih-Chi Hu; Cordula Reitz; Gillian Barry; Renate Strehlau; Gayle Sherman; Elaine J Abrams
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