Treatment of Human Immunodeficiency Virus 1‐Infected Infants and Children with the Protease Inhibitor Nelfinavir Mesylate
Author(s) -
Paul Krogstad,
Andrew Wiznia,
Katherine Luzuriaga,
Wayne M. Dankner,
Karin Nielsen,
Merril Gersten,
Brad Kerr,
Amy Hendricks,
Barbara Boczany,
Martin Rosenberg,
Denna Jung,
Stephen A. Spector,
Yvonne J. Bryson
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/514759
Subject(s) - nelfinavir , medicine , reverse transcriptase , protease inhibitor (pharmacology) , lamivudine , virology , diarrhea , viremia , virus , immunology , gastroenterology , viral load , rna , biology , antiretroviral therapy , hepatitis b virus , biochemistry , gene
An open-label study was conducted of nelfinavir mesylate, given with reverse transcriptase inhibitors to human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1)-infected infants and children 3 months to 13 years of age. Doses of nelfinavir mesylate of 20-30 mg/kg yielded drug exposures comparable to those seen in adults. The drug was well tolerated; mild diarrhea was the primary toxic effect observed. Seventy-one percent (39) of the 55 evaluable subjects had an initial decrease in plasma HIV-1 RNA, of at least 0.7 log10 copies/mL; suppression of plasma HIV-1 RNA levels to < 400 copies/mL was observed in 15. Children who began taking at least one new reverse transcriptase inhibitor near the time when nelfinavir mesylate was started, and those with a > or = 24% proportion of CD4 lymphocytes, had a greater chance of achieving and maintaining a decline in plasma HIV-1 RNA to < 400 copies/mL. Suppression of viremia was achieved in children as young as 3 months of age.
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