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Using dried blood spots to facilitate therapeutic drug monitoring of antiretroviral drugs in resource-poor regions

Authors :
Massimiliano Donzelli
Emili Letang
Manuel Haschke
Stefan Gaugler
Manuel Battegay
Benjamin Berger
Stephan Krähenbühl
Urs Duthaler
Alex Natamatungiro
Dorcas Mnzava
Stefan Erb
Source :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. 73:2729-2737
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2018.

Abstract

Objectives We evaluated whether dried blood spots (DBS) are suitable to monitor combined ART when samples are collected in rural Tanzania and transported over a long distance to a specialized bioanalytical laboratory. Methods Plasma and DBS samples were collected in Tanzania from study patients treated with nevirapine, efavirenz or lopinavir. In addition, plasma, whole blood and DBS samples were obtained from a cohort of HIV patients at the site of the bioanalytical laboratory in Switzerland. DBS samples were analysed using a fully automated LC-MS/MS method. Results Comparison of DBS versus plasma concentrations of samples obtained from the bridging study in Switzerland indicated an acceptable bias only for nevirapine (18.4%), whereas for efavirenz and lopinavir a pronounced difference of -47.4% and -48.1% was found, respectively. Adjusting the DBS concentrations by the haematocrit and the fraction of drug bound to plasma proteins removed this bias [efavirenz +9.4% (-6.9% to +25.7%), lopinavir +2.2% (-20.0% to +24.2%)]. Storage and transportation of samples from Tanzania to Switzerland did not affect the good agreement between plasma and DBS for nevirapine [-2.9% (-34.7% to +29.0%)] and efavirenz [-9.6% (-42.9% to +23.8%)]. For lopinavir, however, adjusted DBS concentrations remained considerably below [-32.8% (-70.4% to +4.8%)] corresponding plasma concentrations due to decay of lopinavir in DBS obtained under field conditions. Conclusions Our field study shows that the DBS technique is a suitable tool for therapeutic drug monitoring in resource-poor regions; however, sample stability remains an issue for certain analytes and therefore needs special consideration.

Details

ISSN :
14602091 and 03057453
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....430d08768a7a5cbf89adaa8f114bd2f4