Back to Search Start Over

The effect of treatment intensification in HIV-infection: a study comparing treatment with ritonavir/saquinavir and ritonavir/saquinavir/stavudine. Prometheus Study Group

Authors :
E H, Gisolf
S, Jurriaans
J, Pelgrom
F, van Wanzeele
M E, van der Ende
K, Brinkman
M J, Borst
F, de Wolf
A J, Japour
S A, Danner
Source :
AIDS (London, England). 14(4)
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

To evaluate the effect of treatment with ritonavir (RTV)/saquinavir (SQV)/6 stavudine (D4T) or RTV/SQV alone, with treatment intensification if needed, in protease inhibitor- and D4T-naïve HIV-1-infected individuals.Multicentre, open-label, randomized controlled trial. Two-hundred and eight patients were randomized to receive treatment with RTV 400 mg/SQV 400 mg twice daily or RTV 400 mg/SQV 400 mg/D4T 40 mg twice daily. Intensification of study medication with reverse transcriptase inhibitors was permitted if serum HIV-RNA remained400 copies/ml after 12 weeks of treatment. Follow-up of this study was 48 weeks.In a strict intention-to-treat analysis, counting all dropouts as virological failures, 63% [95% confidence interval (CI), 54-73%] of subjects in the RTV/SQV group (n = 104) reached a serum HIV-RNA400 copies/ml at week 48, as compared with 69% (95% CI, 60-78%) in the RTV/SQV/D4T group (n = 104; P = 0.379). In the on-treatment analysis these percentages were 88 and 91% respectively. Thirty-one patients intensified their study medication according to the protocol (28 in the RTV/SQV group, three in the RTV/SQV/D4T group). Thirty out of 31 (97%) patients had a serum HIV-RNA400 copies/ml at their last follow-up visit. Ten per cent of patients discontinued study medication due to adverse events.The concept of starting with a simple, potent regimen, that could be intensified if necessary, showed good virological results after 48 weeks in this study, comparable to starting with more drugs from the beginning. Longer follow-up is needed to determine the long-term efficacy of this treatment strategy.

Details

ISSN :
02699370
Volume :
14
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIDS (London, England)
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........122dc19bae54f66f94bb1bd5152067b1