| Literature DB >> 21490779 |
Kevin Peterson1, Sabelle Jallow, Sarah L Rowland-Jones, Thushan I de Silva.
Abstract
HIV-2 contributes approximately a third to the prevalence of HIV in West Africa and is present in significant amounts in several low-income countries outside of West Africa with historical ties to Portugal. It complicates HIV diagnosis, requiring more expensive and technically demanding testing algorithms. Natural polymorphisms and patterns in the development of resistance to antiretrovirals are reviewed, along with their implications for antiretroviral therapy. Nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, crucial in standard first-line regimens for HIV-1 in many low-income settings, have no effect on HIV-2. Nucleoside analogues alone are not sufficiently potent enough to achieve durable virologic control. Some protease inhibitors, in particular those without ritonavir boosting, are not sufficiently effective against HIV-2. Following review of the available evidence and taking the structure and challenges of antiretroviral care in West Africa into consideration, the authors make recommendations and highlight the needs of special populations.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21490779 PMCID: PMC3065912 DOI: 10.1155/2011/463704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1240
Representative daily costs of selected antiretrovirals in West Africa in 2010 [74]. All values represent amounts paid since 01/01/2010 in West Africa except where otherwise noted, in which case the nearest equivalent in terms of year of purchase and income was used.
| Drug | Cost per daya |
|---|---|
| AZT/3TC | $0.28–$0.36 |
| d4T/3TC | $0.12 |
| ABC/3TC | $1.38b |
| ddI (400 mg buffered) | $0.79 |
| 3TC | $0.08–$0.10 |
| TDF | $0.72c |
| TDF/FTC | $0.87–$0.88c |
| LPV/r | $1.24–$1.56d |
| IDV | $0.96d |
| SQV | $7.20e |
| DRV | $22.12–$28.40f |
| Ritonavir (100 mg bd) | $0.22–$0.96d |
aCosts are given in US dollars for standard doses given twice daily or daily in the case of TDF, ddI, ABC/3TC, and TDF/FTC
bDominican Republic; 2008
cRepublic of South Africa, Somalia
d2009
eEgypt
fBulgaria, Jamaica; 2009.
(a) Potential first- and second-line NRTI backbones for HIV-2 and dual infection
| First-line | Second-line |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| TDF/FTC or 3TC* | TDF/AZT/3TC or FTC |
| ABC/3TC | TDF/AZT/3TC or FTC |
*FTC and 3TC are assumed to be essentially equivalent in the table, despite FTC's possible superiority and 3TC's possibly lower cost.
(b) Potential first- and second-line PIs for HIV-2 and dual infection
| First-line | Second-line |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| SQV/r | LPV/r or DRV/r |
| IDV/r | LPV/r or SQV/r or DRV/r |