| Literature DB >> 25745499 |
Stephen G Holt1, David M Gracey2, Miriam T Levy3, David W Mudge4, Ashley B Irish5, Rowan G Walker6, Richard Baer7, Jacob Sevastos8, Riaz Abbas9, Mark A Boyd10.
Abstract
A number of antiviral agents used against Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection and hepatitis B virus (HBV) mono or co-infection have been associated with real nephrotoxicity (including tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), atazanavir, indinavir and lopinavir) or apparent changes in renal function (e.g. cobicistat, ritonavir, rilpivirine and dolutegravir). Patients with HIV are at higher risk of acute and chronic renal dysfunction, so baseline assessment and ongoing monitoring of renal function is an important part of routine management of patients with HIV. Given the paucity of evidence in this area, we sought to establish a consensus view on how routine monitoring could be performed in Australian patients on ART regimens, especially those involving TDF. A group of nephrologists and prescribers (an HIV physician and a hepatologist) were assembled by Gilead to discuss practical and reasonable renal management strategies for patients particularly those on TDF-based combination regimens (in the case of those with HIV-infection) or on TDF-monotherapy (in the case of HBV-mono infection). The group considered which investigations should be performed as part of routine practice, their frequency, and when specialist renal referral is warranted. The algorithm presented suggests testing for serum creatinine along with plasma phosphate and an assessment of urinary protein (rather than albumin) and glucose. Here we advocate baseline tests of renal function at initiation of therapy. If creatinine excretion inhibitors (e.g. cobicistat or rilpivirine) are used as part of the ART regimen, we suggest creatinine is rechecked at 4 weeks and this value used as the new baseline. Repeat testing is suggested at 3-monthly intervals for a year and then at least yearly thereafter if no abnormalities are detected. In patients with abnormal baseline results, renal function assessment should be performed at least 6 monthly. In HBV mono-infected patients advocate that a similar testing protocol may be logical.Entities:
Keywords: Fanconi syndrome; HIV; Hepatitis B; Monitoring; Renal failure; Tenofovir
Year: 2014 PMID: 25745499 PMCID: PMC4350301 DOI: 10.1186/1742-6405-11-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Figure 1Ion transporters involved in proximal tubular cell handling of creatinine and antiviral drugs.
Figure 2Schematic of suggested renal monitoring when starting drugs which are potentially nephrotoxic.
TDF dose reduction strategies
| Creatinine clearance | Dosing interval for TDF 300 mg |
|---|---|
| (or eGFR – CKD-EPI) | |
| >50 | Every 24 hrs |
| 30-49 | Every 48 hrs* |
| 10-29 | Every 72–96 hrs* |
| Haemodialysis | After dialysis every 7 days or after ~12 hrs of dialysis* |
*Consider whether TDF is the appropriate antiviral.