Jonathan Winston1, Michel Chonchol2, Joel Gallant3, Jacques Durr4, Robert B Canada5, Hui Liu6, Patty Martin6, Kiran Patel6, Jason Hindman6, David Piontkowsky6. 1. Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York. 2. Division of Renal Diseases and Hypertension, University of Colorado Hospital, Aurora, Colorado. 3. Southwest CARE Center, Santa Fe, New Mexico. 4. University of South Florida Morsani College of Medicine, Tampa, Florida. 5. The University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee. 6. Gilead Sciences, Foster City, California.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Safety and efficacy of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) as a component of antiretroviral therapy (ART) have been demonstrated in clinical trials. TDF nephrotoxicity has been reported in both HIV-infected and noninfected patients. This meta-analysis explored the frequency of discontinuation attributed to renal adverse events (AEs) in randomized, controlled clinical studies that used TDF-containing regimens for ART-naïve, HIV-infected patients. METHODS: A literature search of 4 electronic databases through October 31, 2013 was utilized. RCTs included were limited to randomized, prospective, comparative design in ART treatment-naïve adults with HIV-1 infections receiving ART. Studies included trials containing TDF treatment regimens, with or without a non-TDF control group. Study design, follow-up, size of study population, treatment group, patient demographics, number of patients exposed to TDF or non-TDF control, baseline characteristics, investigator-defined criteria for renal AEs, and number of discontinuations due to a presumed renal AEs were extracted. RESULTS: Twenty-one clinical studies met the selection criteria. Treatment duration ranged from 48 to 288 weeks. Renal AEs led to study drug discontinuation in 44 of 10,129 patients exposed to TDF (0.43%; 95% CI, 0.32%-0.58%) and 2 of 2,013 patients exposed to non-TDF-containing regimens (0.10%; 95% CI, 0.01%-0.36%). In 5 randomized, controlled studies that included a non-TDF comparator, the estimated risk difference between the treatment groups (TDF vs non-TDF) was 0.50% (95% CI, 0.13%-0.86%; P = .007). CONCLUSIONS: In clinical studies using TDF-containing regimens, the rate of discontinuations due to renal AEs was low, but was slightly higher than in studies using non-TDF comparators.
BACKGROUND: Safety and efficacy of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) as a component of antiretroviral therapy (ART) have been demonstrated in clinical trials. TDF nephrotoxicity has been reported in both HIV-infected and noninfected patients. This meta-analysis explored the frequency of discontinuation attributed to renal adverse events (AEs) in randomized, controlled clinical studies that used TDF-containing regimens for ART-naïve, HIV-infectedpatients. METHODS: A literature search of 4 electronic databases through October 31, 2013 was utilized. RCTs included were limited to randomized, prospective, comparative design in ART treatment-naïve adults with HIV-1 infections receiving ART. Studies included trials containing TDF treatment regimens, with or without a non-TDF control group. Study design, follow-up, size of study population, treatment group, patient demographics, number of patients exposed to TDF or non-TDF control, baseline characteristics, investigator-defined criteria for renal AEs, and number of discontinuations due to a presumed renal AEs were extracted. RESULTS: Twenty-one clinical studies met the selection criteria. Treatment duration ranged from 48 to 288 weeks. Renal AEs led to study drug discontinuation in 44 of 10,129 patients exposed to TDF (0.43%; 95% CI, 0.32%-0.58%) and 2 of 2,013 patients exposed to non-TDF-containing regimens (0.10%; 95% CI, 0.01%-0.36%). In 5 randomized, controlled studies that included a non-TDF comparator, the estimated risk difference between the treatment groups (TDF vs non-TDF) was 0.50% (95% CI, 0.13%-0.86%; P = .007). CONCLUSIONS: In clinical studies using TDF-containing regimens, the rate of discontinuations due to renal AEs was low, but was slightly higher than in studies using non-TDF comparators.
Authors: Jessica L Michal; Saira Rab; Manish Patel; Alison W Kyle; Lesley S Miller; Kirk A Easley; Aley G Kalapila Journal: AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses Date: 2018-06-19 Impact factor: 2.205
Authors: Jean B Nachega; Olalekan A Uthman; Lynne M Mofenson; Jean R Anderson; Steve Kanters; Francoise Renaud; Nathan Ford; Shaffiq Essajee; Meg C Doherty; Edward J Mills Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Date: 2017-09-01 Impact factor: 3.731
Authors: Patrick Wg Mallon; Laurence Brunet; Ricky K Hsu; Jennifer S Fusco; Karam C Mounzer; Girish Prajapati; Andrew P Beyer; Michael B Wohlfeiler; Gregory P Fusco Journal: J Int AIDS Soc Date: 2021-04 Impact factor: 5.396
Authors: Patrick W G Mallon; Laurence Brunet; Jennifer S Fusco; Girish Prajapati; Andrew Beyer; Gregory P Fusco; Michael B Wohlfeiler Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis Date: 2021-12-08 Impact factor: 3.835
Authors: Janneke P Bil; Elske Hoornenborg; Maria Prins; Arjan Hogewoning; Fernando Dias Goncalves Lima; Henry J C de Vries; Udi Davidovich Journal: Front Public Health Date: 2018-02-09