| Literature DB >> 27777797 |
Jacinta Nwamaka Nwogu1, Qing Ma2, Chinedum Peace Babalola1, Waheed Adeola Adedeji3, Gene D Morse2, Babafemi Taiwo4.
Abstract
Neurological complications associated with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are a matter of great concern. While antiretroviral (ARV) drugs are the cornerstone of HIV treatment and typically produce neurological benefit, some ARV drugs have limited CNS penetration while others have been associated with neurotoxicity. CNS penetration is a function of several factors including sieving role of blood-brain and blood-CSF barriers and activity of innate drug transporters. Other factors are related to pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics of the specific ARV agent or mediated by drug interactions, local inflammation, and blood flow. In this review, we provide an overview of the various factors influencing CNS penetration of ARV drugs with an emphasis on those commonly used in sub-Saharan Africa. We also summarize some key associations between ARV drug penetration, CNS efficacy, and neurotoxicity.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27777797 PMCID: PMC5061948 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2587094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1240
Cerebrospinal fluid concentration of some antiretrovirals as a percentage of plasma concentration and their CPE ranking.
| Antiretroviral drug | Sample size | CSF concentration as a percentage of plasma concentration (%) | References | Revised CPE rank [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median (range) | Mean (SD) | ||||
| Zidovudine | 50 | 60 (4–262) | [ | 4 | |
| 18 | 2 (0–674) | [ | |||
| 5 | 96 (8) | [ | |||
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| Abacavir | 54 | 36 | [ | 3 | |
| 3a | 35 (31–44) | [ | |||
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| Lamivudine | 55 | 23 (0–490) | [ | 2 | |
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| Stavudine | 31 | 20 (0–20.4) | [ | 2 | |
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| Didanosine | 4 | 27 (14) | [ | 2 | |
| 5 | Undetected | [ | |||
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| Tenofovir | 38 | 5.7 (3–10)b | [ | 1 | |
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| Efavirenz | 69 | 0.5 (0.26–0.76)b | [ | 3 | |
| 11 | Undetected | [ | |||
| 26 | 0.71 (0.37)c in 600 mg | [ | |||
| 11 | 1.3 (0.8–1.6)b | [ | |||
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| Nevirapine | 16 | 63 (41–77) | [ | 4 | |
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| Indinavir | 19 | 1.7 (88.6)c | [ | 3 | |
| 22 | 16 (0.4–228) or 6 using | [ | |||
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| Lopinavir/r | 26 | 0.23% (0.12–0.75) | [ | 3 | |
| 12 | 0.85 (0.47) | [ | |||
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| Nelfinavir | 6 | Not detected in CSF | [ | 1 | |
| 9 | Not detected in CSF | [ | |||
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| Ritonavir | 8 | 0.00 (0.00–52) | [ | 1 | |
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| Darunavir/r | 14 | 0.5d | [ | 3 | |
| 14 | 0.9 (0.3–1.8) | [ | |||
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| Atazanavir | 9 | 1.12 (0.5–13.9) | [ | 2 | |
| 8 | 1.4 (0.6–3.4)b | [ | |||
| 13 | 3d | [ | |||
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| Raltegravir | 41 | 17 (1.8–33.8)b | [ | 3 | |
| 24 | 3 (1–61) | [ | |||
| 35 | 20.6 (0.5–133) | [ | |||
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| Dolutegravir | 12 | 0.546 (0.480) | [ | N/A | |
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| Maraviroc | 7 | 3.0 (1–10) | [ | 3 | |
| 12 | 2.2 (0.4–17) | [ | |||
| 12 | 1.01 (0.29), 4.20 (1.22)e | [ | |||
aSubjects with multiple plasma and CSF samples, bmedian (IQR), cmean (coefficient of variation), dgeometric mean, e% Maraviroc CSF/unbound plasma ratio, and N/A = not available. The ranks assigned to the antiretrovirals in Table 1 are based on revised ranking system proposed by Letendre et al. and not CSF/plasma ratio from the authors findings in the table. Higher CPE score means higher CNS penetration.
Some reported frequencies of CYP2B6 polymorphism in different African populations.
| Population | Frequency (%) | Number of subjects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| African American | 20 | 50 | [ |
| African American | 36 | 85 | [ |
| African American | 34 | 93 | [ |
| Tanzanians | 36 | 95 | [ |
| Malawians | ∧31 (15) | 26 | [ |
| Ghanaians | 46 | 42 | [ |
| Ghanaians | 25 | 800 | [ |
| Ethiopians | ∧45.5 (8.7) | 262 | [ |
| Ivory coast | 38 | 41 | [ |
| Sierra Leone | 36 | 52 | [ |
| Senegal | 60 | 10 | [ |
| Guinea | 48 | 21 | [ |
| West Africa | 42 | 166 | [ |
| West Africa | 50 | 153 | [ |
| Yoruba (Ibadan, Nigeria) | 35 | 78 | [ |
| South Africa | ∧41 (23) | 80 | [ |
| Xhosa (South Africa) | ∧∧17 | 109 | [ |
| CMA (South Africa) | ∧∧9 | 67 | [ |
| Botswana | 36.6 | 101 | [ |
| Zimbabwe | 49 | 71 | [ |
| Uganda | 35.6 | 121 | [ |
| Uganda | 29 | 7 males | [ |
| Mozambique | 7 | 78 | [ |
∧ GT (TT) and ∧∧loss of function CYP2B6 18.
Some drugs that are affected by host pharmacogenetics and the resultant effect.
| Antiretroviral drug | Enzyme involved | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Efavirenz | CYP2B6 | Increase in efavirenz concentrations and increased risk of discontinuation [ |
| Nevirapine | CYP2B6 | Increase in nevirapine plasma concentrations and increase hypersensitivity adverse effect associated with nevirapine [ |
| Atazanavir | UGT1A1 | Hyperbilirubinemia (indirect plasma bilirubin increase) and jaundice [ |
| Tenofovir | ABCC2, ABCC4 | Renal function decline [ |
| Abacavir | HLA-B | Hypersensitivity associated with abacavir [ |
Summary of the factors affecting antiretroviral drug CNS penetrations.
| General factors | Pharmacokinetics/pharmacogenetics | Other factors |
|---|---|---|
| (i) Blood-Brain barrier (BBB) | (i) Drug-drug interactions | (i) Local cerebral blood flow |