| Literature DB >> 24836963 |
Luis F López-Cortés1, Pompeyo Viciana2, José A Girón-González3, Alberto Romero-Palacios4, Manuel Márquez-Solero5, Maria A Martinez-Perez6, Miguel A López-Ruz7, Javier de la Torre-Lima8, Francisco Téllez-Pérez9, Marcial Delgado-Fernández10, Milagros Garcia-Lázaro11, Fernando Lozano12, Mohamed O Mohamed-Balghata13.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Etravirine (ETV) is recommended in combination with a boosted protease inhibitor plus an optimized background regimen for salvage therapy, but there is limited experience with its use in combination with two nucleos(t)ide reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). This multicenter study aimed to assess the efficacy of this combination in two scenarios: group A) subjects without virologic failure on or no experience with non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) switched due to adverse events and group B) subjects switched after a virologic failure on an efavirenz- or nevirapine-based regimen. The primary endpoint was efficacy at 52 weeks analysed by intention-to-treat. Virologic failure was defined as the inability to suppress plasma HIV-RNA to <50 copies/mL after 24 weeks on treatment, or a confirmed viral load >200 copies/mL in patients who had previously achieved a viral suppression or had an undetectable viral load at inclusion. Two hundred eighty seven patients were included. Treatment efficacy rates in group A and B were 88.0% (CI95, 83.9-92.1%) and 77.4% (CI95, 65.0-89.7%), respectively; the rates reached 97.2% (CI95, 95.1-99.3%) and 90.5% (CI95, 81.7-99.3), by on-treatment analysis. The once-a-day ETV treatment was as effective as the twice daily dosing regimen. Grade 1-2 adverse events were observed motivating a treatment switch in 4.2% of the subjects. In conclusion, ETV (once- or twice daily) plus two analogs is a suitable, well-tolerated combination both as a switching strategy and after failure with first generation NNRTIs, ensuring full drug activity. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01437241.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24836963 PMCID: PMC4023987 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline characteristics of the patients.
| Group A | Group B | |
| (n = 242) | (n = 45) | |
| Male, no. (%) | 183 (75.6) | 34 (75.6) |
| Age, years, M (range) | 44 (21–81) | 42 (25–67) |
| Weight, kg, M (range) | 69 (45–139) | 67 (49–116) |
| Risk factor for HIV, no. (%) | ||
| Previous iv drug use | 80 (33.0) | 14 (31.1) |
| Hetero/homosexual | 154 (63.6) | 29 (64.4) |
| Other | 8 (3.3) | 2 (4.4) |
| Methadone treatment, no. (%) | 30 (12.3) | 8 (17.7) |
| Nadir CD4/µl, M (range) | 198 (4–762) | 218 (6–480) |
| Clinical category C, no. (%) | 57 (23.5) | 9 (20.0) |
| Chronic hepatitis/cirrhosis, no. (%) | 69 (28.5)/21 (8.6) | 8 (17.7)/5 (11.1) |
| HCV | 81 (90.0) | 9 (69.2) |
| HBV | 5 (5.5) | 1 (7.6) |
| HCV+HVB | − | 2 (14.3) |
| Other | 3 (3.3) | 2 (14.3) |
| No. previous ART, M (range) | 2 (1–9) | 2 (1–7) |
| Months on previous ART, M (range) | 36 (1–186) | 37 (3–168) |
| Previous antiretroviral regimen, no. (%) | ||
| EFV +2 NRTIs | 134 (55.3) | 38 (84.4) |
| NVP +2 NRTIs | 16 (6.6) | 7 (15.5) |
| IP/rtv +2 NRTIs | 87 (35.9) | − |
| 3 NRTIs | 5 (2.0) | − |
| Previous failure on NNRTIs, no. (%) | − | 45 (100) |
| Available genotypic resistance test, no. (%) | 137 (56.6) | 45 (100) |
| Wild type | 124 (90.5) | 17 (37.8) |
| K103N | − | 22 (48.9) |
| L100I or K101E or V179T | − | 3 (6.6) |
| G190A | − | 2 (4.4) |
| CD4/µl, M (range) | 473 (12–1360) | 468 (31–1351) |
| HIV-RNA copies/ml, M (range) | <50 (<50–444867) | 982 (108–170000) |
| HIV-RNA <50 copies/ml, no. (%) | 179 (74.0) | − |
| Associated NRTIs, no. (%) | ||
| TDF+FTC | 146 (60.3) | 22 (48.9) |
| ABV +3TC | 83 (34.3) | 9 (20.0) |
| AZT+TDF | 5 (2.1) | 10 (22.2) |
| ABV+TDF | 5 (2.1) | 2 (4.4) |
| AZT +3TC | 2 (0.8) | − |
| ddI +3TC | 1 (0.4) | 2 (4.4) |
| ETR 400 mg qd, no. (%) | 215 (88.8) | 29 (64.4) |
ART: antiretroviral treatment. NRTIs: nucleos(t)ide reverse-transcriptase inhibitors. NNRTIs: non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors. EFV: efavirenz. NVP: nevirapine. TDF: tenofovir. FTC: emtricitabine. ABV: abacavir. 3TC: lamivudine. AZT: zidovudine.
Figure 1Patient disposition.
ETV: etravirine. NRTIs, nucleos(t)ide reverse-transcriptase inhibitors. Group A: subjects without virologic failure on or no experience with non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors switched due to adverse effects. Group B: subjects switched after a virological failure on an efavirenz- or nevirapine-based regimen.
Genotypic resistance tests at virological failure.
| Previous mutations in RT | Mutations in RT at virological failure | ||||||||
| Failure on | Analogues | Non-analogues | ETV | Treatment | Analogues | Non-analogues | ETV | VL at VF | |
| NNRTIS | score | score | |||||||
| 1 | yes | K219Q | K103N, Y188L | 0 | AZT,TDF,ETV | K219Q, 69D, K70R | K103N,V179I,Y188L,H221Y | 0 | 3660 |
| 2 | yes | − | K103N, V179T | 0 | AZT,TDF,ETV | − | A98G,L100I,K103N,V179T | 4.5 | 11900 |
| 3 | no | M184V | − | 0 | AZT,TDF,ETV | M41V | Y181C | 2.5 | 2570 |
| 4 | no | wt | 0 | TDF,FTC,ETV | A62V, K65R, M184I | K101E,V179F,Y181C,G190A | 6 | 612 | |
| 5 | no | wt | 0 | TDF,FTC,ETV | K65N, Y115F, M184V | A98G,L100I,E138K | 3,5 | 308 | |
| 6 | no | wt | 0 | ABV,3TC,ETV | − | E138G,V179F,Y181C | 4 | 85700 | |
| 7 | no | wt | 0 | ABV,3TC,ETV | − | L100I | 2,5 | 1650 | |
| 8–9 | no | wt | 0 | TDF,FTC,ETV | wt | 0 | 692–2650 | ||
| 10–11 | no | wt | 0 | ABV,3TC,ETV | wt | 0 | 103000–817751 | ||
RT, reverse transcriptase. wt: wild-type. VL, viral load. VF, virogical failure.
*Mutation scoring according to reference 22.
Figure 2Proportion of patients with increased aminotransferases levels at any time-point throughout the follow-up.
Figure 3Change in lipid plasma levels (mg/dL) throughout the follow-up.
A: patients with normal baseline values. B: patients with abnormal baseline values on previous NNRTIs- or PI/rtv-based regimens. CT: total cholesterol. HDL-C: high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. LDL-C: low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. TG: triglycerides.