HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pharmacokinetics of Darunavir/Ritonavir Once Daily and Atazanavir/Ritonavir Once Daily Over 72 Hours Following Drug Intake Cessation
The purpose of the study is to look at the levels of three HIV medications darunavir,
ritonavir and atazanavir in the blood after the drug intake has been stopped in order to
understand how long these drugs persist in blood for. The study will specifically look at
these three drugs blood levels after taking them for 10 days everyday.
The main objective is to provide information on the potential safety (in terms of preventing
virological failure and the development of resistance)of delaying drug doses occasionally by
providing information on the decline in drug concentration after dosing has stopped.
The long term use of and success of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is constrained by many
factors including poor adherence and drug intolerance. Poor adherence (missing ART doses)
may lead to the achievement of sub therapeutic drug plasma concentrations and virological
failure. This could also be complicated by the development of resistance to ART which
compromises future therapeutic options because of cross resistance within antiretroviral
drug classes.
In medicine, successful adherence is supposed to mean taking at least 80% of doses. This is
a concept, which has been inherited from the antihypertensive literature and anti-infective
prescribing for therapeutic areas which from that of HIV prescribing in fundamental
principles. The current absence of a curative therapy for HIV infection, means that in order
to be effective, suppressive therapies need to be taken on an indefinite lifelong basis. The
capacity for development of resistance of the virus means that successful adherence equates
to a much higher rate of adherence than 80%. Moreover, in HIV therapy, successful adherence
also means attention to a maximum interval between doses as well as dietary restriction at
the time of dose intake.
Ideally, to guarantee long-term virological response, HIV-infected patients should take
their ART every day at the same time. However, ART is for life and doses can be forgotten or
delayed.
A recent survey confirmed the reasons why people miss their antiretroviral doses: they
forget, they fall asleep, they are too busy, they are depressed, they are away from home,
and their medicines make them sick (Mascolini www.thebody.com 2003).
Drug persistence (the presence of drug at a detectable level high enough to work) in plasma
mainly depends on the half-life. Long half-life antiretroviral agents may allow for
forgotten doses, if they are able to delay the decline of the drug level to sub-therapeutic
concentrations for long enough for the patient to remember to take the drug. Boosted PI are
characterized by different half lives, and therefore different abilities to persist in
plasma.
Unfortunately, data on drug persistence in plasma are limited and whether drug doses can be
forgotten and dosing delayed is unknown.
Therefore, the main objective of this study is to provide information on the potential
safety (in terms of preventing virological failure and the development of resistance) of
delaying drug doses occasionally by providing information on the decline in drug
concentration after dosing has stopped.
Rationale for pharmacogenomic analysis
Pharmacogenetics holds promise in HIV treatment because of the complexity and potential
toxicity of multi antiretroviral drug therapies that are prescribed for long periods. Thus
far, few candidate genes have been examined for a limited number of allelic variants, but a
number of confirmed associations have already emerged.
From a public health perspective, as antiretroviral medications become increasingly
available to racially and ethnically diverse populations worldwide, understanding the
genetic structures of each population may allow us to anticipate the impact of adverse
responses, even in groups that were not represented in drug registration trials.
The existing literature on pharmacogenetic determinants of antiretroviral drug exposure,
drug toxicity, as well as genetic markers associated with the rate of disease progression
underline the recent advances which occurred in the past few years.
However, it is expected that larger-scale comprehensive genome approaches will profoundly
change the landscape of knowledge in the future. Additional studies are needed to assess the
implications for long-term responses to antiretroviral agents.
For this reason we plan to collect a single blood sample from each participant in our
intensive pharmacokinetic studies, such as this one, in order to be able to investigate the
association between genetic polymorphisms in drug disposition genes (such as those encoding
for cytochrome P450 isoenzymes or transmembrane transporters) and drug exposure. A candidate
gene approach will be utilised to examine loci of interest. This procedure will provide
potentially important information on genetic influences on plasma drug concentrations and
give insight into how to improve the management of HIV-infected patients by individualising
therapy. These studies will not be powered for genetic associations but will enable us to
build a data base of genotype-phenotype associations. Prospective genetic studies would need
to be planned based on these preliminary data.
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Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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