HIVART_7 - I-Tech
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Transcript HIVART_7 - I-Tech
Pharmacology
Unit 7
HIV Care and ART:
A Course for Physicians
Learning Objectives
Describe the mechanism of action of
antiretroviral (ARV) drugs
List the common side effects of ARVs
List the standard ARV doses
Identify the ARVs that require dose adjustment
for patients with renal or hepatic disease
List the ARVs that have food requirements
2
Learning Objectives (2)
Describe the mechanisms of drug interactions
relevant to ARVs
Identify commonly used drugs that may have
important interactions with ARVs
Describe the principles and mechanisms of drug
resistance
3
Antiretroviral Drugs
Ethiopian ART Guideline
First Line
Second Line
AZT or d4T
and
3TC
and
NVP or EFV
ABC, TDF, or AZT
and
ddI
and
Lop/r, SQV/r, NFV,
IND/r
5
2003 vs. 2005 WHO Guidelines
6
Classes of Antiretrovirals
NRTIs
Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
Nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NtRTI)
NNRTIs – non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors
PIs – protease inhibitors
Fusion Inhibitors
7
ARVs and the HIV Lifecycle
8
Nucleoside Reverse
Transcriptase Inhibitors (NRTIs)
RNA
DNA
Nucleus
Host
Cell
9
Types of NRTIs
Zidovudine (AZT)
Stavudine (d4T)
Lamivudine (3TC)
Didanosine (ddI)
Abacavir (ABC)
Zalcitabine (ddC)
Emtricitabine (FTC)
Tenofovir (TDF)-Nucleotide RTI
10
Zidovudine (AZT, ZDV)
Dosing: 300mg BID
Food Interactions
None – can take with or without food
Food decreases AZT-related nausea
11
ZDV: Toxicity
Nausea
Bone Marrow
Suppression
Anemia
Neutropenia
Headache
Myalgia
Myopathy
Insomnia
Pigmentation of nail
beds
Lactic acidosis, fatty
liver
12
ZDV: Bone Marrow Suppression
Correlates with drug dose & duration, marrow
reserve, and stage of disease
Anemia occurs after 4-6 weeks
Neutropenia occurs after 12-24 weeks
Marrow histology shows normal or reduced RBC
precursors
Management
Stop AZT if Hgb <8 gm/dl
Hgb typically recovers in 1 to 2 weeks
13
ZDV-Related Fingernail Discoloration
Nail Hyperpigmentation
Can be seen on hands and feet after 2-6 weeks
Usually dark bluish-black vertical-line discoloration
More common among African population
This is NOT an indication to stop ZDV
14
Lamivudine (3TC)
Dosing: 150mg BID or 300mg QD
Food Interactions: none
Toxicity: very rare
Component of all first-line regimens
Also active against Hepatitis B
Main disadvantage: rapid development of
resistance
15
Emtricitabine (FTC)
Dosing: 1 x 200mg capsule QD
Food Interactions: no food interactions
Toxicity
Mild abdominal discomfort
Occasional nausea
Emtricitabine is the fluorinated version of
lamivudine
16
Hepatitis B Co-infection
Drugs active against both HBV & HIV: 3TC, FTC, TDF
HBV develops rapid resistance to 3TC and FTC
TDF + (3TC or FTC) is the optimal NRTI backbone
Differential diagnosis of exacerbation of hepatic disease
in these patients:
Development of 3TC or FTC resistance
“HBV flair” secondary to stopping 3TC or FTC
ART related hepatoxocity (AZT, d4T, ddI, EFV, NVP, All PIs)
Immune reconstitution syndrome
17
Lamivudine + Zidovudine
Dosing: 1 tablet (150 / 300mg) BID
Food Interactions
None – with or without food is ok
Food decreases ZDV-related nausea
18
Stavudine (d4T)
Dosing
40 mg BID for weight > 60 kg
30 mg BID for weight < 60 kg
Food Interactions: None
Toxicity (use lower dose to reduce risk of S/E
development for patients < 60kg)
Peripheral Neuropathy (5-15%, pain, tingling, and numbness in
extremities)
Lactic acidosis, fatty liver
Lipoatrophy
Pancreatitis
Hypertriglyceridemia
19
d4T: Dose-related Side Effects
Peripheral Neuropathy:
Onset usually after 2-6 months of therapy.
If develops: discontinue d4T at onset (or reduce dose
to 20mg Q12H if weight > 60kg, or 15mg Q12H if <
60kg)
Lipoatrophy:
loss of fat tissue on arms, legs, and face
Pancreatitis:
If develops, discontinue therapy.
When symptoms resolve, do not re-challenge with
stavudine
20
Facial Lipoatrophy
21
© ITECH, 2006
Abacavir (ABC)
Dosing: 1 x 300mg tablet BID
Food Interactions: no food interactions
Generally well tolerated
Toxicity
Hypersensitivity reaction
• Occurs within first 6 weeks of therapy
22
Hypersensitivity to Abacavir
Observed in approximately 5% of all patients
receiving abacavir
Multi-organ system involvement
Most common signs and symptoms:
Fever (>80%)
Rash (maculopapular or urticarial) (70%)
Fatigue (>70%)
Flu-like symptoms (50%)
GI (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain)
(50%)
23
Hypersensitivity to Abacavir (2)
Counsel and prepare patient for hypersensitivity
symptoms and to contact provider/pharmacist
immediately
Especially during first month of therapy
Provider/pharmacist determines cause of
symptoms: abacavir or not
Hypersensitivity may be fatal (19 deaths)
NEVER rechallenge
Genetic predisposition
Similar to life-threatening reaction to NVP
24
Abacavir Re-challenge
20% risk of anaphylactic-like reaction upon re-challenge
Death can occur with hours of restarting
Symptoms may include include:
hypotension
bronchoconstriction
renal failure
Laboratory changes may include
Increased CPK
Elevated liver function tests
Reduced lymphocyte count
Abacavir should never be re-challenged!
25
Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate (TDF)
Dosing: 1 x 300mg tablet QD
Food Interactions: None
Very well tolerated, side effects are minimal
Toxicity
Renal insufficiency (rare)
• Must dose adjust with renal failure
Also has activity against Hepatitis B
Dosed 300mg QD
Active against Lamivudine resistant HBV strains
HBV resistance 1% at 1 year
If TDF is stopped, may have HBV hepatitis flare
26
Didanosine (ddI)
Requires a basic environment
Food Interactions: take on empty stomach
Dosing (one of the following)
1 x 400mg enteric coated capsule QD (if <60kg: 250mg QD)
2 x 100mg buffered tab BID or 4 x 100mg QD (if <60kg: 125 mg
BID or 250mg QD)
• NOTE: If use buffered tablets, 2 or more tablets must be
used at each dose to provide adequate buffer
250mg of reconstituted buffered powder BID (if <60kg: 167mg
BID)
• Mix pediatric powder with liquid antacid
27
Didanosine (ddl) (2)
If taken with TDF must reduce ddI dose:
> 60 kg
250 mg/d
< 60 kg
200 mg/d
Without dose adjustment – blunted CD4
response
Toxicity
Peripheral Neuropathy
GI intolerance
Pancreatitis (7%2%)
Lactic acidosis, fatty liver
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NRTI Class Side Effects
As with all antiretrovirals, side effects are worst
during the first 1 to 2 weeks of therapy.
Counsel patients
Potential for side effects
How to handle side effects
Don’t give up
29
NRTI Class Side Effects (2)
Peripheral Neuropathy: ddl + d4T
With continued treatment may be irreversible
Lactic Acidosis, fatty liver: d4T > ddl > AZT
Lipoatrophy: d4T > AZT
Pancreatitis: ddl > d4T
Marrow Suppression: AZT
30
NRTI Mitochondrial Toxicity
Inhibition of mitochondrial DNA polymerase-
oxidative metabolism, ATP generation
Implicated in lactic acidosis with hepatic
steatosis
Other possible manifestations:
Neuropathy (d4T, ddI)
Lipoatrophy (d4T)
Pancreatitis (ddI)
Myopathy (AZT)
Cardiomyopathy (AZT)
31
Hyperlactatemia/Lactic Acidosis
Rare but potentially fatal syndrome (1/1000 pt/yrs)
Linked to prolonged use of NRTIs, especially ddI and
d4T
Acute or subacute onset
Symptoms: nausea, vomiting, weight loss, fatigue
Lab: increased anion gap (or lactate level)
Ultrasound: fatty liver
Management: discontinue NRTI – may take months to
reverse. No specific treatment
32
Neucloside Pairings
YES
NO
AZT + 3TC *
AZT + d4T
d4T + 3TC *
d4T + ddI
TDF + 3TC *
(TDF + ddI)
ddI + 3TC *
(AZT + ddI)
* Can use FTC same as 3TC
33
Non-Nucleoside Reverse
Transcriptase Inhibitors (NNRTIs)
34
Non-Nucleoside Reverse
Transcriptase Inhibitors
NNRTIs
Nevirapine (NVP)
Efavirenz (EFV)
35
Nevirapine (NVP)
Dosing: 200 mg QD x 2 weeks, then 200 mg BID
Food Interactions: None
Toxicity
Rash (17%)
Nausea & vomiting
Hepatitis (8-18%)
• Risk is greatest in first 6 weeks of therapy
• Could be benign or fatal
Black Box warning by FDA (USA):
Do not use NVP in women w/ starting CD4>250
Do not use NVP in men w/ starting CD4> 400
36
Hepatotoxicity: NVP & PIs
NVP:
Hepatic necrosis 1st 6-16 weeks after starting Rx
Those at higher risk for hepatitis include:
• Patients with a history of alcohol abuse, coinfection with
hepatitis B or C and in patients who are older or are
women.
• Persons with higher CD4 cell counts or elevated LFTs
at baseline
PI & NNRTIs: All cause ↑ ALT/AST in 10-15%
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Hepatotoxicity: NVP & PI (2)
NVP
Others
When
First 6-16 weeks
Late
Sxs
Rash, GI Sxs
No Sxs
Long term
consequence
Serious
Unknown
When to d/c
drug
Promptly
ALT> 5-10 x ULN
38
NVP: Hepatotoxicity
“Symptomatic Hepatitis”
Women
Men
CD4 count
Rate
CD4 > 250
11%
CD4 < 250
0.9%
CD4 > 400
6.4%
CD4 < 400
2.3%
Analysis of 607 treatment naïve patients (2NN)
39
NVP for PMTCT
Issue is RESISTANCE and EFFICACY
No SAFETY concerns
40
Nevirapine-Induced Rash
41
Courtesy of HIV Web Study, www.hivwebstudy.org
Nevirapine-Induced Rash (2)
To reduce the risk
The dose should be escalated over the first 2 weeks
• Starting at 200mg QD for 2 weeks and then increasing
to 200mg BID
This dosing makes sense because nevirapine
autoinduces hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes
(CYP3A4)
• Which reduces its own half-life over 2 to 4 weeks from
45 to 25 hours.
42
Efavirenz (EFV)
Dosing: 3 x 200mg capsules or 600mg tab QHS
Food Interactions
Take on an empty stomach or with low-fat meal
• High-fat meals increase absorption by 50%
increases side effects
Consistent results: persistent activity after >5
years
Never surpassed in clinical trial
43
Efavirenz Toxicity
CNS Changes (52%)
Rash (15-27%) usually does not require
discontinuation
Hepatotoxicity (2-8% experience increase in
LFTs > 5 ULN)
Contraindicated during pregnancy
Teratogenic—Class D
44
Efavirenz CNS Toxicity
Symptoms: confusion, Insomnia, nightmares,
poor concentration, mood change, dizziness,
dysequilibrium, depression, psychosis,
“disconnected”
Onset: first dose
Course: usually resolves in 2-3 weeks
Cause: Unknown
Management: warn patient
45
Which Third Drug to Use?
Advantage
Disadvantage
NNRTI
↓ pill burden
Potency
Rifampin
Low barrier to
resistance
Rash
EFV & pregnancy
PI
Potency
Less resistance
Boost with RTV
Metabolic effects
Drug intolerance
GI intolerance
46
EFV vs. NVP
NVP
EFV
Daily doses
2
1
Efficacy
Similar
Similar
Pregnancy
Yes
No
TB (Rifampin)
No (?)
Yes
Side Effects
Liver *; Rash *
CNS
Resistance
Low barrier
Low barrier
47
* May be lethal
NNRTI Class Effects
Side effects
Rash
Hepatotoxicity
Cross resistance:
A single mutation, the K103N, causes high-level
resistance to all 3 drugs in this class: EFV, NVP, and
DLV
Latent pool forever
Importance of adherence
48
NNRTI Rash
Often diffuse, slightly
raised, itchy
Vary in redness and
distribution
Can be severe Steven’s Johnson
Syndrome
Courtesy of the Public Health Image Library/CDC/ J.
Pledger, BSS/VD
49
Protease Inhibitors (PIs)
DNA
Host
Cell
50
Protease Inhibitors (2)
Lopinavir + Ritonavir
Nelfinavir
Saquinavir-HGC
Indinavir
Fosamprenavir
Atazanavir
Ritonavir
51
Ritonavir (RTV)
Substantial GI intolerance prevents use at full,
original dose
Now used to boost other PIs
Doses < 400 mg/day – no anti-HIV activity
Nomenclature: /r (LPV/r, SQV/r)
Requires refrigeration
Hard to make
52
Ritonavir Boosting
AUC
Saquinavir
30 – 74 x
Lopinavir
15 – 20 x
Indinavir
3–6x
Nelfinavir
1.5 x
53
Pharmacokinetic Rationale for
Dual PI Therapy
Single PI is used:
Peaks may reach well above the desired
concentration for effectiveness
• This may lead to drug toxicity
Levels of the drug may become too low
• Permitting viral replication
PIs are used together
Lower peak levels achieved
• Reduces the chance of side effects
Higher trough levels acheived
• Increases potency and reduces the chance of viral
replication
54
Clinical Pharmacology of ART
54
Lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r)
Dosing: 3 caps (400 mg lopinavir/100 mg ritonavir) BID
Each capsule contains LPV 133mg / RTV 33mg
Food Interactions: take with food
Toxicity
Nausea
Weakness
Diarrhea (mild to moderate)
Lipodystrophy
ALT/AST increase
Refrigeration recommended
Stable at room temperature for up to 2 months
Hot temperatures should be avoided
55
Nelfinavir (NFV)
Dosing: 1250 mg PO BID
Food Interactions: take with meal
Toxicity
Diarrhea (10%-30%)
Abdominal pain
Flatulence
Nausea
Rash
Lipodystrophy
ALT/AST increase
56
Saquinavir-Hard Gel Capsules
(SQV) Invirase
Dosing:
Must take with Ritonavir
1000 mg /100 mg bid with food
Toxicity
Diarrhea
Nausea
Abdominal pain
Headache
Lipodystrophy
ALT /AST increase
Refrigeration recommended, but OK at room
temperature for up to 3 months
Hot temperatures should be avoided
57
Indinavir (IDV)
Dosing:
2 x 400mg q 8 hours OR
With RTV 800 / 100 mg bid
Food Interactions: take on empty stomach, or
with low fat snack (e.g. non-fat milk)
Capsules are sensitive to moisture
58
Indinavir (IDV): Toxicity
Nausea
Diarrhea
Nephrolithiasis (flank pain, ↑ SrCr, hematuria, pyuria)
(2%)
Dry lips, dry skin
Bald patches in hair
Ingrown toe or finger nails
Acid reflux (3%)
Hyperbilirubinemia (10-15%)
Lipodystrophy
ALT /AST increase
59
PI Class Side Effects
Metabolic Disorders
Hepatotoxicity
Hyperglycemia, insulin
resistance
Lipid abnormalities
Fat redistribution
GI Intolerance
Drug Interactions
CYP450 3A4 Inhibition: RTV,
LPV > IDV = NFV = APV
>SQV
Bone Disorders
60
Hepatotoxicity
Increased LFT’s observed with all PI’s.
More common in pts with chronic viral hepatitis
(HBV, HCV).
Data do not support withholding PI’s from pts coinfected with HBV or HCV.
Increased ALT/AST is common (10-20%),
asymptomatic and unclear consequence
61
HIV Lipodystrophy Syndrome
Definition
A complex medical condition
Including abnormal fat redistribution and metabolic disturbances
Seen in HIV patients receiving ART
Metabolic complications (primarily PI therapy)
Hepatic insulin resistance
Impaired glucose tolerance
Type 2 diabetes
Hypertriglyceridemia
Hypercholesterolemia
Decreased high density lipoprotein (HDL)
62
Fat Redistribution
Fat accumulation (lipohypertrophy) --PIs
Dorsocervical fat
Visceral adiposity
Breast enlargement
Fat loss (lipoatrophy) – d4T
Facial fat loss
Subcutaneous fat loss of extremities
63
Fat Redistribution Syndromes
Fonte: Dominic C. Chow, MD, University of Hawaii; Larry J. Day, MD,
University of Michigan; Cecilia M. Shikuma, MD, University of Hawaii
64
HIV Lipodystrophy Syndrome (2)
Abnormality
Assoc.
agent
Monitoring
Conse quence
Rx
Fat redistribution
All
ARVs
Appearance
Cosmetic
None;
d/c drug
Insulin
resistance
All PIs
Blood
glucose
Diabetes
Standard
Lipid Increase
All PIs,
except
ATV
Lipids
Cardiovascular
disease
Standard
65
Management of Hyperlipidemia
LDL Goal
Life Style
Drug Rx
Cardiovascular
Disease or Diabetes
< 70
< 100
> 130
> 2 risks *
< 100 – 130
< 130
> 130
0-1 risk *
< 160
< 190
> 190
* Risk = HBP, Age > 45-55 yrs, smoking, genetics
66
Fusion Inhibitor: Enfuvirtide (T-20)
First fusion inhibitor
Binds to gp41 and prevents HIV entry into host cell
Used as part of salvage regimen for ART experienced
patients
Dosing: 90 mg BID by subcutaneous injection
Food interaction: None
Toxicity
Injection site reactions (98%)
Nausea, diarrhea, fatigue, hypersensitivity (< 1%)
67
Dosing Considerations in Patients with
Liver Disease
Drug
Hepatic impairment
NRTIs
No dosage recommendation
NVP
No data available; avoid use in patients with
moderate to severe hepatic impairment
EFV
No recommendation; use with caution in patients
with hepatic impairment
LPV/r
SQV
NFV
IND
No recommendation; use with caution in patients
with hepatic impairment
Reduce dose from 800mg to 600mg in moderate
cirrhosis
68
Dosing Considerations in Patients with
Renal Failure
AZT
CrCl
>60
300mg bid
CrCl
30-59
300mg bid
CrCl
10-29
300mg bid
CrCl
<10
100mg tid
3TC
150mg bid
150mg qd
100mg qd
50mg qd
d4T* 40mg bid
20mg bid
20mg qd
20mg qd
ddI*
400mg qd
200mg qd
125mg qd
125mg qd
TDF
300mg qd
300mg q48 300mg
twice/wk
300mg qwk
*dosing for patients > 60kg
69
Significant Drug Interactions with
ART
70
Mechanisms for Drug Interactions
Altered intracellular activation
D4T combined with ZDV
Altered drug absorption and tissue distribution
Flouroquinolones combined with antacids form
insoluble complex
Altered drug metabolism
Rifampicin combined with NVP
Reduced renal excretion
71
First Pass Effect
Orally administered drugs
Absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract
Pass through the portal venous system to the liver
Subject to first pass effect in the liver
• May limit systemic circulation
Once in the systemic circulation, drugs interact with
receptors in target tissues
72
Drug Metabolism/Elimination
Goal of metabolism:
To change the active part of the medication, making
them more water-soluble and more readily excreted
by the kidney
Metabolism occurs via two types of reactions:
1. Phase I reactions involve:
Oxidation, hydrolysis, and reduction, take place
primarily in the liver CYP450
2. Phase II reactions involve:
Conj (adding another compound) to form glucuronides
73
Cytochrome (CYP450)
Present in liver, small intestines, lungs, and brain
Primary function is to alter toxins (drugs) to speed
excretion
Isoenzymes:1A2, 2C9/19, 2D6, 3A4 are primarily
responsible for drug metabolism
Also metabolize steroid hormones, vitamins, toxins,
prostaglandins, fatty acids
Knowledge of substrates, inhibitors and inducers helps
predict drug interactions
important as PIs are metabolized 80-95% by the CYP450
isoenzymes in liver and small intestine
74
Cytochrome P450 Enzymes
Patient Factors
•Genetics
Outcome of
Drug
Interaction
Drug Factors
•Dose
•Diseases
•Duration
•Diet/Nutrition
•Dosing Times
•Environment
•Sequence
•Smoking
•Route
•Alcohol
Variability
•Dosage Form
Adapted from Philip D. Hansten, Science & Medicine 1998
75
P450 Drug Interactions
Substrate
Any drug that is metabolized by one or more of the P450
enzymes
It is the object drug which is affected by inducer or inhibitor
Inducer
Speeds up metabolism
Decreases substrate level (lack of efficacy is concern)
Onset/offset is gradual
Inhibitor
Slows metabolism of substrate drug
Increases level of drug in blood (toxicity is concern)
Quick onset
This process is almost always competitive and reversible
76
CYP P450 Drug-Drug Interactions
Pharmacologic action of drug is altered by
coadministration of second drug
Co-administration may:
effect (e.g. ritonavir + saquinavir;
ritonavir + simvastatin)
Drug B
New effect (e.g., ritonavir +
amitriptyline;)
Drug A
No
Consequences
effect (e.g.,rifampin +
protease inhibitors, indinavir +
coumadin)
77
Drugs with Potential to Interact with
PIs or NNRTIs
Statins (simvistatin &
lovastatin)
Azole antifungals
Anticonvulsants
Anti-TB (Rifampicin)
Warfarin
Midazolam, trizolam
Alternative medicine
Clarithromycin
Oral contraceptives
Amitriptyline
78
Drug interactions - Key Points
A drug interaction may occur when
A new medication is started
A medication is discontinued
A dose is changed
Use reference manuals when starting / changing
therapy
Beware of food requirements with certain ARVs
79
Drug Resistance
Case Study: Berhan
A 50 year old male patient completed 9 months of TB
therapy (with rifampicin and isoniazid along with
pyridoxine) 3 weeks ago and is continuing with ARV
(EFV 800 mg qhs, 3TC 150 mg bid and ZDV 300 mg bid)
therapy
He presents to the ER with a bloody nose and bruises on
his arm.
Other current medications include:
coumadin for atrial fibrillation
atenolol for blood pressure
What do you suspect has happened?
81
Principles of HIV Drug Resistance
Not all drug failure is due to resistance
Partial HIV suppression promotes resistance
Resistance can be delayed by suppressing the
virus completely
RT and protease are flexible (highly mutable)
Resistance may fade but not disappear when
a drug is stopped
82
Principles of Resistance (2)
Some mutations allow certain viruses to resist
the effects of one or more antiretroviral drugs
Each infected person has a mixture of viruses,
some of which are resistant to some medications
The drug resistant virus usually grows faster and
better than the drug susceptible virus
The drug resistant virus replaces the drug
susceptible virus in the patient
83
Resistance Testing
Two types:
Genotyping
• Less expensive
• Can usually be completed in 1-2 weeks
Phenotyping
• More expensive
• Generally takes 2-3 weeks to complete
84
Suspect Resistance in the Setting of
Treatment Failure
Due to HIV’s high transcription error rate and
high level of replication, mutant HIV variants
constantly generated
These variants often contain mutations that
confer variable levels of resistance to
antiretroviral agents
Poor adherence or suboptimal regimens can
lead to resistance and ‘viral breakthrough’
85
How Does Resistance Develop?
Results from changes (mutations) in the genetic
information in the virus
These changes occur whenever HIV is
replicating
Every possible mutation occurs tens of
thousands of times each day
86
Resistance Mutations
For some drugs (NNRTIs and 3TC), a single
mutation causes high-level resistance.
Resistance to these drugs occurs very quickly
For other drugs (most NRTIs and PIs), many
mutations must occur before high-level
resistance is observed.
Resistance to these drugs occurs more slowly
87
Cross-Resistance
Resistance to one drug can cause resistance to
others of the same class
NNRTI: complete cross-class resistance
NRTI: partial cross-class resistance
PI: partial cross-class resistance
• Partly overcome by ritonavir boosting
88
Minimize Emergence of
Viral Resistance
Never prescribe ARVs in the absence of
adherence counseling and support
Never prescribe monotherapy or dual therapy
Ensure optimal serum drug concentrations
Avoid drug interactions
Diagnose and manage malabsorption
If ARV medications are to be discontinued, stop
all drugs at the same time
Possible exception: NNRTI-based regimen
89
Case Studies
Case Study: Mulu
48 yo woman has received NVP/3TC/d4T. The
pharmacy has no NVP in stock
What should she do?
Continue 3TC/d4T until the NVP becomes available,
then add NVP
Stop all drugs
Stop NVP for 7 days then stop 3TC/d4T
91
Case Study: Mengistu
A 50 year old man has taken EFV/AZT/3TC for
1 year. He now presents with thrush.
What should he take now?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
NVP / 3TC / ddI
NFV / 3TC / d4T
NVP / 3TC / AZT / ABC
LPV/r / d4T / AZT
NFV / TDF / ddI
92
Case Study: Senait
20 year old woman has received EFV/AZT/3TC
and has done well with a CD4 increase from
180 280 /mm3. She becomes pregnant.
What should she take?
1.
2.
3.
4.
NVP / AZT / 3TC
NFV / AZT / 3TC
NVP / d4T / ddI
NVP / TDF / ABC
93
Case Study
Which of the following is the best regimen for a
patient with HIV who failed EFV/3TC/AZT and
now has active TB?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
LPV/r / d4T / ddI
NFV / ddI / TDF
NVP / ddI / TDF
NFV / d4T / TDF
Stop ART; resume after completion of Rifampicin
94
Key Points
Goals of ART include:
Suppression of viral replication
Restoration of immunologic function
Effective ART requires
strict adherence,
proper monitoring of side effects and disease
progression,
recognition and treatment of co-morbidities.
95
Key Points (2)
ART involves a combination of at least 3 drugs,
usually 2 NRTIs + 1 NNRTI or 1 PI.
First line regimen for Ethiopia is d4T/3TC/NVP.
A drug interaction can occur whenever a
medication is started or discontinued, or
whenever a dose is changed.
96
Key Points (3)
Physicians must be knowledgeable about
potential drug-drug and drug-food interactions.
Physicians should question a patient about their
current medications whenever filling a
prescription that is new for them, when a dose is
changing or when a medication is being
discontinued.
Patients should be educated that drug
interactions can also occur if they stop or receive
a change in dose of their medications.
97
Key Points (4)
Drug resistance occurs when HIV continues to
grow in the presence of medications.
A patient with HIV will develop drug resistance if
treated with only 1-2 drugs or if they regularly
miss doses.
Drug resistance limits activity of current drug
regimen and limits future options.
98