
Two-Year Outcome of a Multidrug Regimen in Patients Who Did Not Respond to a Protease Inhibitor Regimen
Author(s) -
Mike Youle,
Mervyn Tyrer,
Martin Fisher,
Fiona Lampe,
Deborah A. Wilson,
Darren Ransom,
Alister Story,
Amanda Mocroft,
Clive Loveday,
Margaret Johnson,
Andrew Phillips
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.162
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1944-7884
pISSN - 1525-4135
DOI - 10.1097/00126334-200201010-00008
Subject(s) - regimen , protease inhibitor (pharmacology) , medicine , oncology , virology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , viral load , antiretroviral therapy
In most studies, people who have not responded virologically to a protease inhibitor (PI)-containing regimen have tended to experience poor virologic responses to subsequent regimens. We describe the 2-year viral load, CD4 count, and clinical outcome of a multidrug regimen used in 60 people who had not responded virologically to a PI-containing regimen. At baseline, median CD4 count was 126/mm(3) (nadir 30/mm(3) ) and median viral load was 320,000 copies/mL. A median of five antiretroviral drugs had previously been used, of which a median of two were PIs. Of these patients, 16% had previously used another nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor besides efavirenz. The multidrug regimen (median 5 drugs) started most commonly included efavirenz (100%), at least one PI (92%, usually indinavir/ritonavir), didanosine (78%), and hydroxyurea (74%). At year 2, 5 patients had died and 5 had no measure available. Nine patients developed a new AIDS event and 10 patients were known to have stopped all antiretroviral therapy. Thirty-one patients (52% of the whole group, 72% of those remaining on therapy with viral load value available) had viral load <50 copies/mL. Thus, a substantial proportion of patients who had failed to respond virologically to PI-containing regimens can achieve profound and sustained virologic suppression with a multidrug regimen.