| Literature DB >> 29568644 |
Graeme Meintjes1, Michelle A Moorhouse1, Sergio Carmona1, Natasha Davies1, Sipho Dlamini1, Cloete van Vuuren1, Thandekile Manzini1, Moeketsi Mathe1, Yunus Moosa1, Jennifer Nash1, Jeremy Nel1, Yoliswa Pakade1, Joana Woods1, Gert Van Zyl1, Francesca Conradie1, Francois Venter1.
Abstract
These guidelines are intended as an update to those published in the Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine in 2014 and the update on when to initiate antiretroviral therapy in 2015. Since the release of the previous guidelines, the scale-up of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in southern Africa has continued. New antiretroviral drugs have become available with improved efficacy, safety and robustness. The guidelines are intended for countries in the southern African region, which vary between lower and middle income.Year: 2017 PMID: 29568644 PMCID: PMC5843236 DOI: 10.4102/sajhivmed.v18i1.776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: South Afr J HIV Med ISSN: 1608-9693 Impact factor: 2.744
Classes of antiretroviral agents.
| Class | Abbreviation | Mechanism of action | Specific action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleoside and nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors | NRTIs and NtRTIs | Reverse transcriptase inhibition | Nucleic acid analogues mimic the normal building blocks of DNA, preventing transcription of viral RNA to DNA |
| Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors | NNRTIs | Reverse transcriptase inhibition | Alter the conformation of the catalytic site of reverse transcriptase and directly inhibit its action |
| Protease inhibitors | PIs | Protease inhibition | Inhibit the final maturation stages of HIV replication, resulting in the formation of non-infective viral particles |
| Integrase inhibitors (also termed integrase strand transfer inhibitors) | InSTIs | Inhibition of viral integration | Prevent the transfer of proviral DNA strands into the host chromosomal DNA |
| Entry inhibitors | – | Entry inhibition | Bind to viral gp41 or gp120 or host cell CD4+ or chemokine (CCR5) receptors |
CCR5, C-C chemokine receptor type 5; NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; NtRTIs, nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors; NNRTIs, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; PIs, protease inhibitors; InSTIs, integrase inhibitors (integrase strand transfer inhibitors).
Dosage and common adverse drug reactions of antiretroviral drugs available in southern Africa.
| Generic name | Class of drug | Recommended dosage | Common or severe ADR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tenofovir (TDF) | NtRTI | 300 mg daily | |
| Lamivudine (3TC) | NRTI | 150 mg 12-hourly or 300 mg daily | |
| Emtricitabine (FTC) | NRTI | 200 mg daily | Palmar hyperpigmentation |
| Abacavir (ABC) | NRTI | 300 mg 12-hourly or 600 mg daily | |
| Zidovudine (AZT) | NRTI | 300 mg 12-hourly | |
| Stavudine (d4T) | NRTI | 30 mg 12-hourly | Peripheral neuropathy, lipoatrophy, |
| Didanosine (ddI) | NRTI | 400 mg daily (250 mg daily if < 60 kg) taken on an empty stomach (only enteric-coated formulation available) | Peripheral neuropathy, |
| Efavirenz (EFV) | NNRTI | 600 mg at night (400 mg at night if < 40 kg) | Central nervous system symptoms (vivid dreams, problems with concentration, dizziness, confusion, mood disturbance, psychosis), |
| Nevirapine (NVP) | NNRTI | 200 mg daily for 14 days, then 200 mg 12-hourly | |
| Rilpivirine (RPV) | NNRTI | 25 mg daily with food | |
| Etravirine (ETR) | NNRTI | 200 mg 12-hourly | Rash, hepatitis (both uncommon) |
| Atazanavir (ATV) | PI | 400 mg daily (only if ART-naive) or 300 mg with ritonavir 100 mg daily (preferable) with TDF, always 300/100 mg daily and with EFV 400/100 mg daily | Unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia (visible jaundice in minority of patients), dyslipidaemia (low potential), renal stones (rare), hepatitis (uncommon) |
| Lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) | Boosted PI | 400/100 mg 12-hourly or 800/200 mg daily (only if PI-naive) | GI upset, dyslipidaemia, hepatitis |
| Darunavir (DRV) | PI | 600 mg 12-hourly with 100 mg ritonavir 12-hourly or 800/100 mg daily (only if PI-naive) | GI upset, rash, dyslipidaemia, hepatitis (uncommon). Contains sulphonamide moiety (use with caution in patients with sulpha allergy) |
| Saquinavir (SQV) (rarely used) | PI | 1000 mg with 100 mg ritonavir; 12-hourly, or 1600 mg with 100 mg ritonavir daily (only if PI-naive); Take with a fatty meal, or up to 2 h after meal | GI disturbance (mild), hepatitis, hyperglycaemia, dyslipidaemia |
| Raltegravir (RAL) | InSTI | 400 mg 12-hourly | Headache and other CNS side effects, GI upset, hepatitis and rash (rare), rhabdomyolysis (rare) |
| Dolutegravir (DTG) | InSTI | 50 mg daily | Insomnia, headache and other CNS side effects, GI upset, hepatitis and rash (rare) |
| Maraviroc (MVC) | CCR5 blocker | 150 mg, 300 mg or 600 mg 12-hourly (doses depend on concomitant medication and interactions) | Rash, hepatitis, fever, abdominal pain, cough, dizziness, musculoskeletal symptoms (all rare) |
Note: Patients receiving SQV should be switched to the recommended PIs (consult an expert if the patient’s VL is not suppressed). We recommend against regimens containing dual RTV-boosted PIs, as there is no evidence for superior efficacy[2] and more side effects are likely. Low-dose RTV is used to ‘boost’ the concentration of other PIs. It is always used with LPV (in FDC) and is strongly encouraged with all other PIs. In rare situations, ATV without boosting is used in first-line therapy.
Efavirenz 400 mg nocte is non-inferior in terms of virological efficacy to 600 mg nocte regardless of weight, but this dose has not been evaluated in patients who are pregnant and patients on tuberculosis treatment.
We now discourage the use of d4T, ddI or NVP unless there is a specific clinical reason (e.g. intolerance of multiple other drugs) given the toxicity associated with these drugs and the availability of alternatives. D4T, ddI and SQV are now rarely used.
ARV, antiretroviral; ADR, adverse drug reaction; NtRTI, nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor; NRTI, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; SA, South Africa; GI, gastrointestinal; NNRTI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; PI, protease inhibitor; ART, antiretroviral therapy; InSTI, integrase inhibitor (integrase strand transfer inhibitor); CCR5, C-C chemokine receptor type 5; RTV, ritonavir; FDC, fixed dose combination; VL, viral load; TDF, tenofovir; DRV/r, darunavir/ritonavir.
, FTC is not available as a single drug in SA, only co-formulated; ‡, All PIs may be associated with cardiac conduction abnormalities (especially PR interval prolongation). This seldom results in clinically significant effects, but caution should be taken when co-prescribing other drugs that cause delayed cardiac conduction, such as macrolides; §Life-threatening reactions are indicated in bold; ¶, ARV combinations to be avoided include:
AZT + d4T (antagonism)
TDF + ddI (associated with poorer virological and immunological responses and increased toxicity)
d4T + ddI (associated with a very high risk for mitochondrial toxicities such as lactic acidosis and peripheral neuropathy)
ETR + ATV/r (due to drug interaction)
ETR + DTG unless a boosted PI is also used in the combination (due to drug interaction)
, The following three PIs are recommended for use: LPV/r, ATV/r and DRV/r.
Medical reasons to defer initiation of antiretroviral therapy.
| Reason | Action |
|---|---|
| Diagnosis of CM | Defer ART for 4–6 weeks after start of antifungal treatment |
| Serum or plasma cryptococcal antigen positive | Defer ART for 2 weeks after start of antifungal treatment (if meningitis is excluded on LP then ART does not need to be deferred) |
| Diagnosis of TB meningitis or tuberculoma | Defer ART until 4–8 weeks after start of TB treatment |
| Diagnosis of TB at non-neurological site | Defer ART up to 2 weeks after start of TB treatment if CD4+ ≤ 50 cells/μL and up to 8 weeks if CD4+ > 50 cells/μL |
| Headache | Investigate for meningitis before starting ART |
| TB symptoms (cough, night sweats, fever, recent weight loss) | Investigate for TB before starting ART |
| Significantly abnormal liver function tests (ALT > 200 or jaundice) | Investigate and address the cause before starting ART, including other drugs causing DILI |
CM, cryptococcal meningitis; ART, antiretroviral therapy; TB, tuberculosis; ALT, alanine transaminase; DILI, drug-induced liver injury; LP, lumbar puncture.
Antiretroviral drug dosage adjustments in the event of renal failure.
| Drug | CrCl | Haemodialysis (dose after dialysis) | Peritoneal dialysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 mL/min–50 mL/min | < 10 mL/min | |||
| TDF | AVOID | AVOID | 300 mg once weekly | Unknown |
| ABC | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
| 3TC | 150 mg daily | 50 mg daily | 50 mg first dose and thereafter 25 mg daily | 50 mg first dose and thereafter 25 mg daily |
| AZT | Unchanged | 300 mg daily | 300 mg daily | 300 mg daily |
| d4T | 15 mg, 12-hourly | 15 mg daily | 15 mg daily | Unknown |
| ddI | > 60 kg body weight: 200 mg daily; | > 60 kg body weight: 125 mg daily; | > 60 kg body weight: 125 mg daily; | > 60 kg body weight: 125 mg daily; |
| < 60 kg body weight: 150 mg daily | < 60 kg body weight: 75 mg daily | < 60 kg body weight: 75 mg daily | < 60 kg body weight: 75 mg daily | |
| NNRTIs | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
| PIs | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
| InSTIs | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged | Unchanged |
Source: Please see the full reference list of the article, Meintjes G, Moorhouse MA, Carmona S, et al. Adult antiretroviral therapy guidelines 2017. S Afr J HIV Med. 2017;18(1), a776. https://doi.org/10.4102/sajhivmed.v18i1.776, for more information
CrCl, creatinine clearance; TDF, tenofovir; ABC, abacavir; 3TC, lamivudine; AZT, zidovudine; d4T, stavudine; ddI, didanosine; NNRTIs, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; PIs, protease inhibitors; InSTIs, integrase strand transfer inhibitors; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; MDRD, modification of diet in renal disease.
, Some experts recommend that the lowest available tablet dose of 150 mg 3TC daily be used in patients with advanced renal disease (CrCl < 10 mL/min) and patients on dialysis so as to avoid having to use the liquid formulation of 3TC, and because of the favourable safety profile and lack of data to suggest 3TC dose-related toxicity.59 This is particularly relevant if the 3TC liquid formulation is unavailable or not tolerated; ‡, The modified Cockgraft–Gault equation: CrCl = (140 – age × ideal weight) ÷ serum creatinine. For women, multiply the total by 0.85; §, Many laboratories report the eGFR calculated by using a variation of the MDRD formula. This result can be used (in place of the calculated CrCl) to make decisions regarding the use of TDF and for modification of the dose of other NRTIs based on this table.
Preferred first-line regimen options.
| Options | Preferred | Alternative | One of |
|---|---|---|---|
| NRTI backbone | TDF + FTC/3TC | ABC | – |
| – | AZT | – | |
| – | d4T | – | |
| Third drug | – | – | EFV |
| – | – | DTG | |
| – | – | RPV |
NRTI, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; tenofovir; FTC, emtricitabine; 3TC, lamivudine; ABC, abacavir; AZT, zidovudine; d4T, stavudine; EFV, efavirenz; DTG, dolutegravir; RPV, rilpivirine.
, If creatinine clearance < 50 mL/min; ‡, Only if both TDF and ABC contraindicated or unavailable AND haemoglobin > 8 g/dL; §, Only for short-term use in patients with contraindications to all other NRTIs – we advise against using d4T for longer than 3 months; ¶, Only if VL < 100 000 copies/mL.
Standard laboratory monitoring of patients once commenced on antiretroviral therapy.
| Test | When | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Ongoing | ||
| VL | Yes | 3 months; 6 months and then 6-monthly | If VL undetectable for > 12 months, can reduce to 12-monthly |
| CD4 count | Yes | 6-monthly at virological or clinical failure | Can be stopped if CD4 > 200 and virologically suppressed |
| FBC | Yes | Monthly for 3 months; at 6 months | For patients on AZT-containing regimens |
| ALT | Yes | After initiation: 2, 4, 8 and 12 weeks | Only routinely monitored for patients on NVP-containing regimens and where the result is available quickly or the patient is easily contactable to come back if there is a problem |
| Creatinine clearance | Yes | 3 months; 6 months and then 6-monthly | Also at 1 month and 2 months in high risk patients. If symptoms of tubular wasting (e.g. muscle weakness) check potassium and phosphate levels |
| Total cholesterol and triglycerides (fasting) | Not routinely | After 3 months on PI-containing regimen | If normal at 3 months, reassess only if other cardiovascular risk factors are present |
, This recommended routine monitoring ensures a standard level of care is given to patients on ART. However, it does not replace clinical judgement. These tests should also be carried out when clinically indicated, based on the discretion of the clinician.
VL, viral load; AZT, zidovudine; FBC, full blood count; ALT, alanine transaminase; NVP, nevirapine; PI, protease inhibitor.
Mutations selected by first-line nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor combinations.
| First-line NRTIs | NRTI mutations selected |
|---|---|
| 3TC or FTC | Select for M184V, which compromises both 3TC and FTC and slightly impairs the activity of ABC and ddI, but increases susceptibility to AZT, d4T and TDF |
| AZT | Selects for TAMs, which may compromise all NRTIs |
| d4T | Selects for TAMs, which may compromise all NRTIs. In a minority of patients, d4T may select for K65R, which compromises TDF, ABC and ddI, but increases susceptibility to AZT |
| TDF | Selects for K65R, which compromises TDF, ABC and ddI, but increases susceptibility to AZT. TDF also selects for K70E |
| ABC | Selects for L74V, which compromises ABC and ddI. May also select for K65R, which compromises TDF, ABC and ddI, but increases susceptibility to AZT. Selects for Y115F, which decreases its susceptibility |
NRTI, nucleoside or nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor; 3TC, lamivudine; FTC, emtricitabine; ABC, abacavir; ddI, didanosine; AZT = zidovudine; d4T, stavudine; TDF, tenofovir; TAMs, thymidine analogue mutations.
Note: These mutations accumulate with time – the longer the patient has virological failure, the more of these mutations are likely to be selected.
, The presence of ≥ 3 TAMs, including M41L and L210W, confers intermediate-level to high-level TDF resistance.
Choice of second-line nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors in relation to first-line nucleoside transcriptase inhibitors used.
| First-line NRTIs used | Second-line NRTI combination |
|---|---|
| AZT + 3TC | TDF + 3TC |
| d4T +3TC | TDF + 3TC |
| TDF + 3TC | AZT + 3TC |
| ABC + 3TC | AZT + 3TC |
NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; AZT, zidovudine; 3TC, lamivudine; TDF, tenofovir; d4T, stavudine; ABC, abacavir; FTC, emtricitabine.
, 3TC is interchangeable with FTC as part of TDF/FTC combination tablet (FTC not available as single drug).
FIGURE 1Indications for doing a resistance test on second-line antiretroviral therapy.
FIGURE 2Algorithm for choosing drugs in third-line antiretroviral therapy regimen based on Stanford database score.
Antiretroviral therapy interactions with rifampicin and recommendations for co-administration.
| Class | ART drug | Interaction | Dose of ART drug with rifampicin |
|---|---|---|---|
| NRTI | All in class | No significant pharmacokinetic interactions | No dose adjustment required. |
| NNRTI | EFV | Mild reduction in EFV concentrations. In some patients on TB treatment, EFV concentrations may increase | No dose adjustment required (600 mg |
| NVP | Moderate reduction in NVP concentrations with increased risk of virological failure compared with EFV | Use standard dosing, but omit the lead-in dose phase and start 200 mg NVP 12-hourly. | |
| ETR and RPV | Marked reduction in concentrations | Do not prescribe concomitantly with rifampicin. | |
| PI | LPV/r | LPV plasma concentrations significantly decreased | The preferable strategy is to double the dose of LPV/r to 800/200 mg 12-hourly. |
| All other PIs | Marked reduction in PI concentrations | Do not prescribe concomitantly. | |
| InSTI | RAL | Reduction in concentrations, but a clinical trial showed that standard dosing results in adequate virological suppression[ | No dose adjustment required (i.e. RAL 400 mg 12-hourly). |
| DTG | Significant reduction in concentrations | Dosing frequency increased to 50 mg 12-hourly. |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; NRTI, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; NNRTI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; EFV, efavirenz; NVP, nevirapine; ETR, etravirine; RPV, rilpivirine; PI, protease inhibitor; LPV, lopinavir; LPV/r, lopinavir/ritonavir; RTV, ritonavir; InSTI, integrase inhibitor (integrase strand transfer inhibitor); RAL, raltegravir; DTG, dolutegravir.
, The double dosing regimen is preferred as it is better tolerated. Dose adjustments should be continued for 2 weeks after rifampicin is stopped.
Dosing of antiretroviral therapy drugs and rifabutin when prescribed concomitantly.
| ART drug | ART dosage | Rifabutin dosage |
|---|---|---|
| EFV | No change | Increase to 450 mg/day |
| NVP | No change | 300 mg/day |
| ATV or RTV-boosted PIs | No change | Decrease to 150 mg/day (monitor ALT, neutrophils and visual symptoms at least monthly) |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; EFV, efavirenz; NVP, nevirapine; ATV, atazanavir; RTV, ritonavir; PIs, protease inhibitors; ALT, alanine transaminase.
Shared side effects of antiretroviral therapy and tuberculosis treatment.
| Side effects | ART | TB treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Nausea | AZT, ddI, PIs | Pyrazinamide, ethionamide |
| Hepatitis | NVP, EFV, PIs (NRTIs can cause steatohepatitis) | RIF, rifabutin, INH, pyrazinamide, bedaquiline and many second-line drugs, including quinolones |
| Peripheral neuropathy | d4T, ddI | INH, ethionamide, terizidone/cycloserine, linezolid |
| Renal impairment | TDF | Aminoglycosides, RIF (rare) |
| Rash | NVP, EFV, RAL | RIF, rifabutin, INH, pyrazinamide, ethambutol, streptomycin and many second-line drugs, including quinolones |
| Neuropsychiatric complications | EFV, DTG | Terizidone/cycloserine, quinolones, INH |
| Myelosuppression | AZT | Rifabutin and linezolid |
ART, antiretroviral therapy; TB, tuberculosis; AZT, zidovudine; ddI, didanosine; PIs, protease inhibitors; NVP, nevirapine; EFV, efavirenz; NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; RIF, rifampicin; INH, isoniazid; d4T, stavudine; TDF, tenofovir; RAL, raltegravir; DTG, dolutegravir.
Prescribing antiretrovirals in liver impairment.
| Class | Drug | Prescribing notes |
|---|---|---|
| NRTIs | TDF | In patients with chronic hepatitis B, there is a risk of rebound hepatitis when TDF is discontinued |
| FTC | In patients with chronic hepatitis B, there is a risk of rebound hepatitis when FTC is discontinued or if hepatitis B resistance to FTC develops | |
| 3TC | In patients with chronic hepatitis B, there is a risk of rebound hepatitis when 3TC is discontinued or if hepatitis B resistance to 3TC develops | |
| AZT | Decrease dose by 50% or double dosage interval if significant liver disease | |
| ABC | Reduce adult dose to 200 mg bd for significant liver impairment. Contraindicated in severe hepatic impairment | |
| d4T | Use with caution | |
| ddI | Use with caution: reports implicate use as a risk factor for the development of hepatic decompensation in patients being treated for cirrhosis because of hepatitis C | |
| NNRTIs | EFV | Caution should be exercised in administering EFV to patients with liver disease; therapeutic drug monitoring should be done if available |
| NVP | Avoid if significant hepatic impairment or active hepatitis B or C | |
| ETR | Use with caution in severe liver disease (Child-Pugh Class C) as dosage recommendation has not been established | |
| RPV | Use with caution in severe liver disease (Child-Pugh Class C) as dosage recommendation has not been established | |
| PIs | ATV | Avoid in severe hepatic impairment |
| LPV/r | LPV is highly metabolised in the liver and concentrations may be increased in patients with hepatic impairment; therapeutic drug monitoring should be done if available | |
| DRV | Use with caution or avoid if significant liver disease | |
| SQV | Avoid: there have been reports of worsening liver disease and development of portal hypertension after starting SQV in patients with severe liver disease | |
| InSTI | RAL | No dosage adjustment necessary in mild-to-moderate hepatic insufficiency |
| DTG | Not recommended in severe liver disease (Child-Pugh Class C) | |
| CCR5 blocker | MVC | Concentrations likely to be increased with hepatic impairment |
NRTIs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; TDF, tenofovir; FTC, emtricitabine; 3TC, lamivudine; AZT, zidovudine; ABC, abacavir; bd, twice-daily; d4T, stavudine; ddI, didanosine; NNRTIs, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; EFV, efavirenz; NVP, nevirapine; ETR, etravirine; RPV, rilpivirine; PIs, protease inhibitors; ATV, atazanavir; LPV/r, lopinavir/ritonavir; DRV, darunavir; SQV, saquinavir; InSTI, integrase inhibitor (integrase strand transfer inhibitor); RAL, raltegravir; DTG, dolutegravir; CCR5, C-C chemokine receptor type 5; MVC, maraviroc.
Guidelines for managing haematological toxicity (mainly zidovudine-induced).
| Hb (g/dL) | Hb low but > 8: Monitor weekly | < 8: Switch from AZT | |
| Neutrophils (× 109/L) | 1.0–1.5: Repeat 4 weeks | 0.75–0.99: Repeat 2 weeks Consider switching from AZT | < 0.75: Switch from AZT |
AZT, zidovudine; Hb, haemoglobin.
Guidelines for managing hepatotoxicity: Elevation.
| ULN | < 2.5 × ULN | 2.5–5 × ULN | > 5 × ULN |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALT | Repeat at 1–2 weeks | Repeat at 1 week | Discontinue relevant drug(s) |
| Bilirubin | Repeat at 1 week | Discontinue relevant drug(s) | Discontinue relevant drug(s) |
Note: Any elevations with symptoms of hepatitis (nausea, vomiting, right-upper-quadrant pain) should be regarded as an indication to stop the relevant drugs.
ALT, alanine transaminase; ULN, upper limit of normal.
Indications for and duration of isoniazid preventive therapy.
| TST | Pre-ART* | On ART |
|---|---|---|
| Not done | IPT for 6 months | IPT for 12 months |
| Negative | IPT not indicated | IPT for 12 months |
| Positive | IPT for at least 36 months | IPT for at least 36 months |
Note: This would only apply in the case of a patient wishing to defer ART initiation.
IPT, isoniazid preventive therapy; TST, tuberculin skin test; ART, antiretroviral therapy.