1. Pharmacokinetics of total and unbound darunavir in HIV-1-infected pregnant women.
- Author
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Colbers A, Moltó J, Ivanovic J, Kabeya K, Hawkins D, Gingelmaier A, Taylor G, Weizsäcker K, Sadiq ST, Van der Ende M, Giaquinto C, and Burger D
- Subjects
- Adult, Darunavir, Drug Administration Schedule, Drug Therapy, Combination, Female, HIV Infections virology, HIV Protease Inhibitors administration & dosage, HIV Protease Inhibitors adverse effects, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Risk Factors, Sulfonamides administration & dosage, Sulfonamides adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Viral Load, Young Adult, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Protease Inhibitors pharmacokinetics, HIV-1 drug effects, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious drug therapy, Sulfonamides pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the pharmacokinetics of darunavir in pregnant HIV-infected women in the third trimester and post-partum., Patients and Methods: This was a non-randomized, open-label, multicentre, Phase IV study in HIV-infected pregnant women recruited from HIV treatment centres in Europe. HIV-infected pregnant women treated with darunavir (800/100 mg once daily or 600/100 mg twice daily) as part of their combination ART were included. Pharmacokinetic curves were recorded in the third trimester and post-partum. A cord blood sample and maternal sample were collected. The study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under number NCT00825929., Results: Twenty-four women were included in the analysis [darunavir/ritonavir: 600/100 mg twice daily (n=6); 800/100 mg once daily (n=17); and 600/100 mg once daily (n=1)]. Geometric mean ratios of third trimester versus post-partum (90% CI) were 0.78 (0.60-1.00) for total darunavir AUC0-tau after 600/100 mg twice-daily dosing and 0.67 (0.56-0.82) for total darunavir AUC0-tau after 800/100 mg once-daily dosing. The unbound fraction of darunavir was not different during pregnancy (12%) compared with post-partum (10%). The median (range) ratio of darunavir cord blood/maternal blood was 0.13 (0.08-0.35). Viral load close to delivery was <300 copies/mL in all but two patients. All children were tested HIV-negative and no congenital abnormalities were reported., Conclusions: Darunavir AUC and Cmax were substantially decreased in pregnancy for both darunavir/ritonavir regimens. This decrease in exposure did not result in mother-to-child transmission. For antiretroviral-naive patients, who are adherent, take darunavir with food and are not using concomitant medication reducing darunavir concentrations, 800/100 mg of darunavir/ritonavir once daily is adequate in pregnancy. For all other patients 600/100 mg of darunavir/ritonavir twice daily is recommended during pregnancy., (© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2015
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