| Literature DB >> 34065305 |
Ashley O Otto1, Christina G Rivera1, John D Zeuli1, Zelalem Temesgen2.
Abstract
Contemporary antiretroviral agents afford enhanced potency and safety for patients living with HIV. Newer antiretroviral drugs are often better tolerated than those initially approved in the early stages of the HIV epidemic. While the safety profile has improved, adverse drug reactions still occur. We have segregated the antiretroviral agents used in contemporary practice into class groupings based on their mechanism of antiviral activity (non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, integrase inhibitors, protease inhibitors, and entry inhibitors) while providing a review and discussion of the hepatoxicity seen in the most relevant clinical literature published to date. Clinical literature for individual agents is discussed and agent comparisons afforded within each group in tabular format. Our review will provide a summative overview of the incidence and medications associated with hepatic adverse reactions linked to the use of contemporary antiretroviral drugs.Entities:
Keywords: antiretroviral therapy; hepatotoxicity; human immunodeficiency virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 34065305 PMCID: PMC8160846 DOI: 10.3390/cells10051263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Antiretroviral agents (by mechanism of action) used in contemporary management of HIV.
| Nucleoside/Nucleotide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NRTIs) | Non-Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NNRTIs) | Protease Inhibitors (PIs) | Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitors (INSTIs) | CCR5 Antagonist | CD4-Directed Post-Attachment Inhibitor | Attachment Inhibitor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abacavir (ABC) | Doravirine (DOR) | Atazanavir (ATV) | Raltegravir (RAL) | Maraviroc (MVC) | Ibalizumab (IBA) | Fostemsavir (FTR) |
| Emtricitabine (FTC) | Efavirenz (EFV) | Darunavir (DRV) | Elvitegravir (EVG) | |||
| Lamivudine (3TC) | Etravirine (ETR) | Lopinavir (LPV) | Dolutegravir (DTG) | |||
| Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) | Rilpivirine (RPV) | Bictegravir (BIC) | ||||
| Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) | Cabotegravir (CAB) |
Clinical trial evaluation of hepatic toxicity and incidence for non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
| Reference | Drug(s) | No. of Study Patients | Hepatic Evaluation | Overall Incidence of Cases/100 Persons Exposed | Study Design | Patient Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulkowski 2002 [ | Efavirenz | 312 | Combined Grade 3 and 4 | 8 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 40% HCV-positive; 52% concurrent protease inhibitor use |
| van Leth 2004 | Efavirenz | 400 | Combined Grade 3 and 4 | 4.5 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 10% HCV-positive; 4% HBV-positive |
| Girard 2012 | Etravirine | 599 | Grade 3: AST/ALT 5.1–10× ULN | Grade 3: 4.4 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced; 12% HBV- and/or HCV-positive |
| Molina 2011 | Rilpivirine | 346 | Combined Grade 3 and 4 | AST: 2 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 3% HBV-positive; 2% HCV-positive |
| Cohen 2011 | Rilpivirine | 340 | AST/ALT 5.1–10× ULN | 2 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 4% HBV-positive; 5% HCV-positive |
| Nelson 2012 [ | Rilpivirine | 686 | Combined Grades 1–4 | 2.2 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 8.4% HBV- and/or HCV-positive |
| Molina 2020 | Doravirine | 383 | AST/ALT ≥ 5× ULN | ALT: 1 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| Orkin 2020 | Doravirine | 363 | AST/ALT 5–9.9× ULN | ALT: 0.8 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 3% HBV- and/or HCV-positive |
| Johnson 2019 | Doravirine | 447 | ALT/ALT ≥ 3× ULN plus bilirubin ≥ 2× ULN and alkaline phosphatase < 2× ULN | 0 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced; 3% HBV- and/or HCV-positive |
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; ULN, upper limit of normal.
Clinical trial evaluation of hepatic toxicity and incidence for nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
| Reference | Drug(s) | No. of Study Patients | Hepatic Evaluation | Overall Incidence of Cases/100 Persons Exposed | Study Design | Patient Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soni 2008 [ | Abacavir | 2 | Patient 1: ALT > 10× ULN | - | Case report | Patient 1: Female; HLA B*5701 negative; baseline ALT 21 IU/L |
| Di Filippo 2014 [ | Abacavir | 1 | AST: < 5× ULN | - | Case report | Male; HLA B*5701 negative; baseline AST 27 IU/L and ALT 85 IU/L |
| Pezzani 2016 [ | Abacavir | 1 | AST: 5× ULN | - | Case report | Female; HLA B*5701 negative; baseline AST/ALT normal |
| Schiano 1997 [ | Lamivudine | 1 | Total bilirubin: > 10× ULN | - | Case report | Male; HBV co-infection; cirrhosis |
| Ormseth 2001 [ | Lamivudine | 1 | Total bilirubin: >10× ULN | - | Case report | HBV co-infection; baseline ALT 171 IU/L, bilirubin 3.1 mg/dL |
| Mayer 2020 | Tenofovir | Combined grade 3 and 4 | AST: 2 | Prospective | HIV-uninfected; PrEP |
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; HLA*B, major histocompatibility complex, class I, B; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; ULN, upper limit of normal.
Clinical trial evaluation of hepatic toxicity and incidence for integrase strand transfer inhibitors.
| Reference | Drug(s) | No. of Study Patients | Hepatic Evaluation | Overall Incidence of Cases/100 Persons Exposed | Study Design | Patient Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steigbigel 2010 | Raltegravir | 462 | AST/ALT > 10× ULN | AST: 0.7 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced; multidrug resistant |
| Lennox 2010 | Raltegravir | 281 | AST/ALT/ALK Phos > 5× ULN | AST: 3.2 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 6% HBV and/or HCV |
| DeJesus 2012 | Elvitegravir/cobicistat | 352 | Combination of all grades for AST/ALT elevations | AST: 17.6 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 1% HBV; 5% HCV |
| Sax 2012 | Elvitegravir/cobicistat | 347 | Combination of all grades for AST/ALT elevations | AST: 15 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 1% HBV; 5% HCV |
| Squillace 2017 | Elvitegravir/cobicistat | 280 | Grade 1–2: AST/ALT 1.25–2.4× ULN (if baseline WNL) or baseline (if baseline value abnormal) | Grade 1–2; treatment-naive: 3.8 | Prospective | 72.1% treatment-experienced; 27.9% treatment-naive; 21.8% HCV |
| Min 2011 [ | Dolutegravir | 28 | Combination of all grades for AST/ALT elevations | 0 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced and treatment-naive; integrase strand transfer inhibitor-naive |
| van Lunzen 2012 | Dolutegravir | 205 | AST/ALT ≥ 5× ULN | 0.5 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 9% HCV |
| Raffi 2013 | Dolutegravir | 411 | AST/ALT ≥ 5× ULN | 0.5 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 2% HBV; 10% HCV |
| Sax 2017 [ | Bictegravir | 64 | Grade 2–4: AST/ALT ≥ 2.5× ULN | AST: 9 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| Gallant 2017 | Bictegravir | 314 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT ≥ 5× ULN | AST: 5 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| Sax 2017 | Bictegravir | 314 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT ≥ 5× ULN | AST: 2 | Prospective | Treatment-naive; 3% HBV; 2% HCV |
| Markowitz 2017 | Cabotegravir | 94 | Grade 2–4: AST/ALT | 1 | Prospective | HIV-uninfected |
| Rizzardini 2020 | Cabotegravir | 591 | AST/ALT ≥ 5× ULN | 2 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced; 7% HCV |
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; ULN, upper limit of normal.
Clinical trial evaluation of hepatic toxicity and incidence for protease inhibitors.
| Reference | Drug(s) | No. of Study Patients | Hepatic Evaluation | Overall Incidence of Cases/100 Persons Exposed | Study Design | Patient Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Torti 2009 | Atazanavir | 2404 | Grade 3–4: ALT > 5× ULN | ALT: 6.4 | Retrospective | Longitudinal multicenter cohort; 47.3% HCV, 7.3% HBV |
| McDonald 2012 CASTLE [ | Atazanavir/ | 441 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT > 5× ULN | AST: 3 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| Gallant 2017 [ | Atazanavir/ | 348 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT > 5× ULN | AST: 3 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| Atazanavir/ | 344 | AST: 4 | ||||
| Walmsley 2002 | Lopinavir/ritonavir | 326 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT > 5× ULN | AST or ALT: 4.5 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| González-García 2010 | Lopinavir/ritonavir once daily | 333 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT > 5× ULN | AST: 1 | Prospective | Treatment-naive |
| Lopinavir/ritonavir twice daily | 331 | AST: 2 | ||||
| Pollard 2004 | Lopinavir/ritonavir | 148 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT > 5× ULN | AST: 5 | Prospective | Single PI-experienced, NNRTI-naive |
| Zajdenverg 2010 | Lopinavir/ritonavir once daily | 300 | Grade 3–4: AST/ALT > 5× ULN | AST: 3 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced |
| Lopinavir/ritonavir twice daily | 299 | AST: 2 | ||||
| Orkin 2013 | Lopinavir/ritonavir | 346 | Grade 2–4 AST/ALT | AST: 14.9 | Prospective | Treatment-naive, HCV or HBV 12.5% (DRV/r) 13.9% (LPV/r) |
| Darunavir/ritonavir | 343 | AST: 12.9 | ||||
| Madruga 2007 | Lopinavir/ritonavir | 297 | Grade 2–4 AST/ALT | AST: 9 | Prospective | Treatment-experienced, HCV or HBV 13% (LPV/r), 18%(DRV/r) |
| Darunavir/ritonavir | 298 | AST: 7 | ||||
| Arasteh 2009 POWER-1, 2, 3 (Week 96 Pooled Data) [ | Darunavir/ritonavir | 467 | Grade 2–4 AST/ALT | AST: 10 | Prospective | Extensive treatment- experienced |
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; DRV/r, darunavir/ritonavir; HBV, hepatitis B virus; HCV, hepatitis C virus; LPV/r, lopinavir/ritonavir; TBILI, total bilirubin; NNRTI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; ULN, upper limit of normal.
ALT and bilirubin abnormalities noted in maraviroc phase 1 multiple-dose studies.
| Phase 1 Multiple-Dose Studies [ | ||
|---|---|---|
| ALT | Maraviroc ( | Placebo ( |
| >2 to ≤ 5× ULN | 8 (2.9%) | 0 |
| >5× ULN | 1 (0.4%) | 0 |
| Bilirubin—Total | ( | ( |
| >1.25 to ≤ 2.5× ULN | 3 (1.1%) | 0 |
| >2.5× ULN | 0 | 0 |
Abbreviations: ALT, alanine transaminase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; ULN, upper limit of normal.
ALT/Bilirubin and hepatobiliary discontinuation related to maraviroc in MERIT.
| MERIT Study 96 Week Data [ | ||
|---|---|---|
| MVC 300 mg Twice Daily + AZT/3TC | EFZ 600 mg Daily + AZT/3TC | |
| ALT: Maximum value by patient over 96 weeks | ||
| Grade 1/2 | 134 (38.0%) | 139 (39.7%) |
| Grade 3 | 11 (3.1%) | 12 (3.4%) |
| Grade 4 | 3 (0.8%) | 2 (0.6%) |
| Bilirubin-total: Maximum value by patient over 96 weeks | ||
| Grade 1/2 | 47 (13.3%) | 5 (1.4%) |
| Grade 3 | 3 (0.8%) | 0 |
| Grade 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Discontinuation due to a treatment-related hepatobiliary AE | ||
| 1 (0.3%) | 2 (0.6%) | |
Abbreviations: AE, adverse event; AZT, zidovudine; MVC, maraviroc; ULN, upper limit of normal; 3TC, lamivudine.
ALT/bilirubin, hepatobiliary AEs/discontinuation in MOTIVATE studies.
| MOTIVATE Studies 96 Week Data [ | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| MVC 300 mg Once Daily + OBT | MVC 300 mg Twice Daily + OBT | Placebo + OBT | |
| Grade 3/4 Treatment-related | 1 (0.2%) | 2 (0.5%) | 1 (0.5%) |
| Discontinuation due to any hepatobiliary AE | 2 (0.5%) | 2 (0.5%) | 1 (0.5%) |
| ALT: Events per 100 years of exposure (% incidence of maximum lab value) | |||
| Grade 1/2 | 55.4 (50.2%) | 54.2 (51.5%) | 86.8 (50.7%) |
| Grade 3 | 3.5 (4.4%) | 1.9 (2.4%) | 5.2 (3.9%) |
| Grade 4 | 0.4 (0.5%) | 0.7 (1.0%) | 1.3 (1.0%) |
| Bilirubin-Total: Events per 100 years of exposure (% incidence of maximum lab value) | |||
| Grade 1/2 | 36.4 (38.2%) | 30.4 (33.3%) | 56.8 (36.2%) |
| Grade 3 | 7.7 (9.1%) | 4.7 (5.7%) | 6.7 (4.8%) |
| Grade 4 | 1.4 (1.7%) | 0.7 (1.0%) | 1.9 (1.4%) |
Abbreviations: AE, adverse event; OBT, optimized background regimen, MVC, maraviroc; ULN, upper limit of normal.