Literature DB >> 18482965

Pharmacoepidemiological approach to the predisposing factors for highly active antiretroviral therapy failure in an HIV-positive cohort from Cordoba City (Argentina) 1995-2005.

E A Soria1, I I Cadile, L R Allende, L E Kremer.   

Abstract

Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) restores immunity, avoids resistance and delays disease progression. Nonetheless, adverse medicament reactions (AMRs) and therapeutic failure (TF) are still deleterious events. Consequently, their predisposing factors should be evaluated. Data from 181 men and 28 women of an Argentinean cohort (1995-2005) were collected and analysed by logistic regression, studying 63 schemes (15 active principles). The AMRs were the main cause of scheme change, followed by TF and medicament simplification, without influence of age and sex. Twenty-nine schemes exhibited TF at least once. Compared with zidovudine-lamivudine-nevirapine (success: >75%), the following schemes fail more frequently (P < 0.01): pre-HAART (8-fold), indinavir-containing ones (30-fold) and retrotranscriptase inhibitors with > or =3 protease inhibitors (11-fold). Inadequate patient adherence preceded failure (>95%), but not successful treatments, with a strong AMR-TF association (P < 0.005). Although some schemes had inherently increased TF, low adherence, drug toxicity and TF were critically interrelated, interfering with HAART goals.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18482965     DOI: 10.1258/ijsa.2007.007164

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J STD AIDS        ISSN: 0956-4624            Impact factor:   1.359


  3 in total

1.  Rates and reasons for early change of first HAART in HIV-1-infected patients in 7 sites throughout the Caribbean and Latin America.

Authors:  Carina Cesar; Bryan E Shepherd; Alejandro J Krolewiecki; Valeria I Fink; Mauro Schechter; Suely H Tuboi; Marcelo Wolff; Jean W Pape; Paul Leger; Denis Padgett; Juan Sierra Madero; Eduardo Gotuzzo; Omar Sued; Catherine C McGowan; Daniel R Masys; Pedro E Cahn
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-06-01       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Implementation and uptake of the Conexiones y Opciones en la Argentina intervention: feasibility and acceptability.

Authors:  Deborah L Jones; Mar Lucas; Inés Arístegui; Alejandra Bordato; Graciela Fernandez-Cabanillas; Virginia Zalazar; Omar Sued; Diego Cecchini; Isabel Cassetti; Pedro Cahn; Lina Bofill; Stephen M Weiss
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2016-04-27

3.  HIV-Antiretroviral Therapy Induced Liver, Gastrointestinal, and Pancreatic Injury.

Authors:  Manuela G Neuman; Michelle Schneider; Radu M Nanau; Charles Parry
Journal:  Int J Hepatol       Date:  2012-03-11
  3 in total

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