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10th Anniversary Conference Of The British HIV Association [BHIVA]15 – 17 April 2004, City Hall, Cardiff, UK |
[AUTHOR(S):] S Taylor1, S Allen2, E Smit3, S Fidler4, S Gibbons5 S Drake1, A Wade2, P Cane3, J Fox4, DJ Back5
1 Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, 2 Coventry and Warwickshire Hospital, 3 Health Protection Agency, Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, 4 Imperial College London, 5 University of Liverpool, UK
BHIVA Conf 2004 Apr 15-17;10:O6
BACKGROUND: Current antiretroviral drugs differ in their relative plasma elimination half-lives (t1/2). The reported EFV t1/2 is 40–55 hours. Therefore, EFV concentrations may persist at therapeutic levels for greater than 1 week following discontinuation. If drugs with a shorter t1/2 are stopped at the same time as EFV, patients will effectively be receiving monotherapy for a significant period of time.
METHODS: 10 HIV-1+ patients took part in a pharmacokinetic (PK) study. Blood was drawn at baseline (day 0) and at days 4, 7, 14 and 21 after stopping EFV. Plasma samples were analysed for EFV concentrations by high-performance liquid chromatography and T1/2 determined by regression analysis. Viral RNA ± resistance testing was performed at each time point. A further 25 patients who stopped EFV after short-course antiretroviral therapy following seroconversion were assessed to obtain virological data on patients stopping EFV 7 days prior to nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). Resistance testing was performed before antiretroviral therapy and 4 weeks after stopping EFV.
RESULTS: Five patients had EFV T1/2 within the expected range. However, five had EFV T1/2 >100 hours (median 123, range 114-229). Four of these were black African women and three had therapeutic EFV >1000 ng/ml 2 weeks after stopping EFV. Of the 25 patients in the virological study only one had resistance 4 weeks after stopping treatment.
CONCLUSION: Virological data from persons fully suppressed at the time of stopping therapy suggest EFV can be stopped 7 days before other shorter-acting drugs. These extended PK data suggest the stop window should be increased to 2–3 weeks (or switch from EFV to cover this).
PRESENTING AUTHOR: S Taylor
040415
O6
Copyright © 2004 - British HIV Association (BHIVA) Reproduction of this abstract (other than one copy for personal reference) must be cleared through the BHIVA Organising Secretariat 1 Mountview Court, 310 Friern Barnet Lane, London N20 0LD