Literature DB >> 25397563

Nuke-sparing regimens as a main simplification strategy and high level of toxicity resolution after antiretroviral switch: the SWITCHART Study.

Ana Carrero-Gras1, Antonio Antela2, Jessica Muñoz-Rodríguez3, Marta Díaz-Menéndez4, Pompeyo Viciana5, Adriadna Torrella-Domingo6, José Sanz-Moreno7, María Jesús Téllez-Molina8, Javier Moreno9, José Hernández-Quero10, Isabel A Pérez-Hernández11, Pere Domingo-Pedrol3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The advent of combined antiretroviral therapy (ART) in the past decade has led to HIV suppression in most cases. Virological failure was the main reason for ART switch a few years ago; however, toxicity and treatment simplification have now gained importance due to the availability of more effective and convenient drugs. This study assessed the reasons for ART switch in daily practice.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Observational retrospective study that included patients whose ART was switched between January 2011 and July 2012. Patients with any other switch during the follow-up period (until September 2013) were excluded.
RESULTS: A total of 246 patients were included. Main reasons for ART switch were simplification (33%) and toxicity (31%), followed by clinical trial inclusion (13%), virological failure (6%), drug interaction (4%), patient decision (3%), lack of adherence (2%), pregnancy (1%) and other (8%). Eighty patients switched to a simpler regimen (median age 48 [40-53], mean CD4 count 608±265 cells/cl, 89% <50 copies/ml, mean number of previous regimens 6±5, mean time on previous ART 3±2 years). In this case, previous ART mostly included 2NRTI+1PI/r (54%) (Figure 1). The simplification strategy mainly contained nuke-sparing regimens (60%) based on PI (DRV/r 48%): monotherapy 46%, dual therapy 13% (PI/r+maraviroc 9%, PI/r+NNRTI 4%) and triple therapy 1% (PI/r+maraviroc+raltegravir). The second preferred simplification option was 2NRTI+1NNRTI (24%). Seventy-seven patients switched due to toxicities (median age 47 [43-53], mean CD4 count 606±350 cells/μl, <50 copies/ml 82%, mean number of previous regimens 4±3, mean time on previous ART 3±3 years). Renal (25%) and CNS (18%) toxicities were the main reasons for ART switch, followed by diarrhoea (16%), liver enzyme elevation (ALT 10%; AST 9%; bilirubin 7%), lipid elevation (cholesterol 5%; triglycerides 8%), nausea (7%) and other (=5%) (Figure 2). All patients with renal toxicity were under TDF and in most cases this drug was removed from the new regimen (with 3TC/ABC or nuke-sparing). Among patients with CNS toxicity, 79% were taking EFV; the main new treatment was a second-generation NNRTI (ETR)+2NRTI. Toxicities were completely resolved in 66% of patients, partially resolved in 22% and not resolved in only 12%; the median time from ART switch to toxicity resolution was 4 (2-8) months.
CONCLUSIONS: The main reasons for ART switch in daily practice are simplification and toxicities, renal and CNS toxicities being the most prevalent. The preferred simplification strategies are nuke-sparing regimens, mainly DRV/r-based monotherapy and dual therapy. ART switch leads to a complete resolution of toxicities in most cases in the short term.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 25397563      PMCID: PMC4225341          DOI: 10.7448/IAS.17.4.19819

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc        ISSN: 1758-2652            Impact factor:   5.396


Antiretroviral therapy before and after treatment simplification (N=80). Main toxicities before and after switching the antiretroviral therapy (N=77).
  3 in total

1.  Clinical and Virologic Outcomes After Changes in First Antiretroviral Regimen at 7 Sites in the Caribbean, Central and South America Network.

Authors:  Marcelo Wolff; Bryan E Shepherd; Claudia Cortés; Peter Rebeiro; Carina Cesar; Sandra Wagner Cardoso; Jean W Pape; Denis Padgett; Juan Sierra-Madero; Juan Echevarria; Catherine C McGowan
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2016-01-01       Impact factor: 3.731

2.  The Factors Related to CD4+ T-Cell Recovery and Viral Suppression in Patients Who Have Low CD4+ T Cell Counts at the Initiation of HAART: A Retrospective Study of the National HIV Treatment Sub-Database of Zhejiang Province, China, 2014.

Authors:  Lin He; Xiaohong Pan; Zhihui Dou; Peng Huang; Xin Zhou; Zhihang Peng; Jinlei Zheng; Jiafeng Zhang; Jiezhe Yang; Yun Xu; Jun Jiang; Lin Chen; Jianmin Jiang; Ning Wang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-02-22       Impact factor: 3.240

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Authors:  D Sculier; T Doco-Lecompte; S Yerly; K J Metzner; L A Decosterd; A Calmy
Journal:  HIV Med       Date:  2018-06-22       Impact factor: 3.180

  3 in total

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