| Literature DB >> 34063534 |
Athanasios-Dimitrios Bakasis1, Theodoros Androutsakos1.
Abstract
After the introduction of antiretroviral treatment (ART) back in 1996, the lifespan of people living with HIV (PLWH) has been substantially increased, while the major causes of morbidity and mortality have switched from opportunistic infections and AIDS-related neoplasms to cardiovascular and liver diseases. HIV itself may lead to liver damage and subsequent liver fibrosis (LF) through multiple pathways. Apart from HIV, viral hepatitis, alcoholic and especially non-alcoholic liver diseases have been implicated in liver involvement among PLWH. Another well known cause of hepatotoxicity is ART, raising clinically significant concerns about LF in long-term treatment. In this review we present the existing data and analyze the association of LF with all ART drug classes. Published data derived from many studies are to some extent controversial and therefore remain inconclusive. Among all the antiretroviral drugs, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, especially didanosine and zidovudine, seem to carry the greatest risk for LF, with integrase strand transfer inhibitors and entry inhibitors having minimal risk. Surprisingly, even though protease inhibitors often lead to insulin resistance, they do not seem to be associated with a significant risk of LF. In conclusion, most ART drugs are safe in long-term treatment and seldom lead to severe LF when no liver-related co-morbidities exist.Entities:
Keywords: ART; antiretroviral treatment; didanosine; liver fibrosis; nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; protease inhibitors; zidovudine
Year: 2021 PMID: 34063534 PMCID: PMC8156893 DOI: 10.3390/cells10051212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Antiretroviral drug classes and the proposed mechanisms of liver damage associated with their use.
| ART Drug Classes | Mechanism of Liver Damage |
|---|---|
| NRTIs | Mitochondrial toxicity |
| NNRTIs | Mitochondrial toxicity |
| PIs | Liver steatosis |
| INSTIs | Hepatotoxic metabolic by-products |
| Entry inhibitors | Drug-drug interactions |
Abbreviations: ART: Antiretroviral treatment; NRTIs: Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, NNRTIs: Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, PIs: Protease inhibitors, INSTIs: Integrase strand transfer inhibitors.
Clinical studies connecting a specific antiretroviral drug or class with liver fibrosis.
| First Author, Year | Type of Study | Nr of pts | Assessment of LF | ART Drug/Class Correlated with LF | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McGovern BH, 2006 [ | Retrospective | 183 | LB | NRTIs | NRTIs, especially DDI and d4T, associated with liver steatosis and fibrosis |
| Sulkowski MS, 2005 [ | Cross-sectional | 112 | LB | NRTIs | d4T associated with liver steatosis and eventually LF |
| Focà E, | Retrospective | 1433 | FIB-4 | NRTIs | Prolonged exposure to NRTIs predicted LF progression; possible protective effect of NNRTIs and PIs |
| Merchante N, 2010 [ | Prospective | 258 | TE | DDI | Duration of DDI use associated with significant LF |
| Loko MA, | Prospective | 671 | TE | DDI | Use of DDI for more than 5 months predisposed for significant LF |
| Kapogiannis BG, 2016 [ | Prospective | 1785 | FIB-4 | DDI | DDI use correlated with a worse FIB-4 and APRI scores |
| Kooij KW, | Cross-sectional | 598 | FIB-4 | DDI | Prior use of DDI associated with worse LF measured by FIB-4 score |
| Anadol E, | Cross-sectional | 333 | APRI | DDI | History of exposure to DDI associated with significant LF and cirrhosis |
| Boyd A, | Prospective | 167 | Fibrotest | AZT | LF progression under AZT treatment |
| Brunet L, | Prospective | 314 | APRI | Abacavir, 3TC | Abacavir/3TC as backbone associated with higher APRI |
| Vinikoor M, 2017 [ | Prospective | 463 | TE | TDF | TDF use associated with improvement in TE score |
| Ding Y, | Retrospective | 3900 | FIB-4 | TDF | TDF was a negative predictor for LF improvement |
| Benhamou Y, 2001 [ | Retrospective | 182 | LB | PIs | PIs associated with lower LF stage |
| Macías J, | Cross Sectional | 152 | LB | PIs NVR | NVR use associated with severe LF; duration of exposure not correlated with LF grade |
| Fernández-Montero JV, | Retrospective | 545 | TE | PIs (mainly Lopinavir) NVR | NVR associated with protection and PI use (mainly Lopinavir) associated with progression of LF |
| Berenguer J, 2008 [ | Cross Sectional | 201 | LB | NNRTIs | NNRTIs (especially NVR) associated with low probability of significant LF |
| Macías J, | Prospective | 39 | TE | EFV, Raltegravir | Switching Efavirenz to Raltegravir showed decreases in the degree of hepatic steatosis |
| Calza L, | Prospective | 61 | TE | PIs | Change from ritonavir-boosted PI-based ART to raltegravir-based ART led to a lower liver steatosis but not LF grade |
| Rossetti B, | Prospective | 150 | FIB-4 | MVC | Switch from MVC-free to MVC+Darunavir/ritonavir led to a better APRI score after 48 weeks |
Abbreviations: 3TC: Lamivudine; APRI: AST to platelets ration index; AZT: Zidovudine; DDI: Didanosine; d4T: Stavudine; EFV: Efavirenz; FIB-4: Fibrosis-4 score; LB: Liver Biopsy; LF: Liver fibrosis; MVC: Maraviroc; NNRTIs: Non-Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; NRTIs: Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; NVR: Nevirapine; Protease Inhibitors; TDF: Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate; TE: Transient elastography.