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New Drug Combinations Help Patients Whose HIV Develops Resistance After Several Different Treatments

Date:
July 9, 2002
Source:
Columbia University College Of Physicians And Surgeons
Summary:
A multi-center, randomized, and placebo-controlled trial of 481 people infected with HIV shows that giving patients a new combination of drugs, which includes two protease inhibitors rather than one, can reduce the virus load in a substantial proportion of patients who already had taken several anti-HIV drugs.
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BARCELONA, Spain —- Cocktails of anti-AIDS drugs have dramatically increased survival of individuals infected with HIV. But the virus often develops resistance to the drugs in people who previously have taken multiple combinations of the medications. Now a multi-center, randomized, and placebo-controlled trial of 481 people infected with HIV, co-chaired by Dr. Scott Hammer of Columbia University and Dr. John Mellors of the University of Pittsburgh, shows that giving patients a new combination of drugs, which includes two protease inhibitors rather than one, can reduce the virus load in a substantial proportion of patients who already had taken several anti-HIV drugs.

"Control of virus load levels in the blood leads to an improved immune system and a greater period of health, delaying the opportunistic infections and death associated with HIV infection," says Dr. Hammer. Dr. Hammer is professor of medicine, Harold C. Neu Professor of Infectious Diseases, professor of epidemiology in the Mailman School of Public Health, and chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. Dr. Mellors is professor of medicine, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases, and director of the HIV/AIDS program at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

The study results are being published online July 6 by the Journal of the American Medical Association to coincide with the International AIDS Conference in Barcelona, Spain. The study was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases-sponsored Adult AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG).

In the ACTG 398 study, which took place at 31 participating medical centers in the United States, patients were split into four groups, each taking the protease inhibitor, amprenavir, and either a placebo or a second protease inhibitor (saquinavir, indinavir, or nelfinavir). A protease inhibitor interferes with an enzyme HIV uses to reproduce itself.

All participants also received drugs that act on the HIV reverse transcriptase enzyme: abacavir, a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; efavirenz, a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor; and adefovir dipivoxil, a nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor. Reverse transciptase is another essential enzyme the virus uses to reproduce itself in human cells. These drugs had not been taken before by the patients.

After 24 weeks, the investigators found that 31 percent of these antiretroviral-experienced patients with moderately advanced immunodeficiency could significantly lower their virus counts to below "detectable levels" with regimens containing four or five new drugs.

"The overall response rate in the study was modest but resistance in this experienced population is a difficult problem to overcome and we set a high standard of virus suppression (i.e., a viral load less than 200 HIV/RNA copies/milliliter) to show success," Dr. Hammer says.

On average, though, the patients showed more than a 90 percent reduction in their blood viral load—although they may not have achieved a 200 RNA copy/ml level. "The decrease should be associated with improved health," Dr Hammer says.

Certain subgroups of patients, however, did better than others: patients who took two protease inhibitors and those who had never taken a non-nucleoside drug before the study. Patients who had a higher-than-usual level of sensitivity to the non-nucleoside inhibitor, efavirenz, termed hypersusceptibility, had a better response than those with the usual level of sensitivity to the drug.

"The study results have clear implications for HIV-infected individuals who are planning their long-term treatment approach," Dr. Hammer says. "Reserving potent classes of drugs, if possible, rather than using all of them in a cocktail during first- and second-line treatments should improve the long-term response rates of patients to anti-HIV drugs."

The study also points to the continuing need for new types of drugs that have activity against HIV strains resistant to older drugs. "There are promising drugs on the horizon that should move the field closer to the goal of long-term viral suppression and clinical well being over many years, if not decades," Dr. Hammer says.


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Materials provided by Columbia University College Of Physicians And Surgeons. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Cite This Page:

Columbia University College Of Physicians And Surgeons. "New Drug Combinations Help Patients Whose HIV Develops Resistance After Several Different Treatments." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 9 July 2002. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/07/020709054946.htm>.
Columbia University College Of Physicians And Surgeons. (2002, July 9). New Drug Combinations Help Patients Whose HIV Develops Resistance After Several Different Treatments. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 7, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/07/020709054946.htm
Columbia University College Of Physicians And Surgeons. "New Drug Combinations Help Patients Whose HIV Develops Resistance After Several Different Treatments." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/07/020709054946.htm (accessed December 7, 2024).

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