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Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection

Atazanavir (ATV) is one of the latest protease inhibitors (PI) approved for the treatment of HIV infection. The drug has a relatively long-life (~7 h) and large inhibitory quotient which allows once daily administration. It is generally well tolerated and the main side effect is hyperbilirubinemia,...

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Autores principales: Rivas, Pablo, Morello, Judit, Garrido, Carolina, Rodríguez-Nóvoa, Sonia, Soriano, Vincent
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2697529/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19436623
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author Rivas, Pablo
Morello, Judit
Garrido, Carolina
Rodríguez-Nóvoa, Sonia
Soriano, Vincent
author_facet Rivas, Pablo
Morello, Judit
Garrido, Carolina
Rodríguez-Nóvoa, Sonia
Soriano, Vincent
author_sort Rivas, Pablo
collection PubMed
description Atazanavir (ATV) is one of the latest protease inhibitors (PI) approved for the treatment of HIV infection. The drug has a relatively long-life (~7 h) and large inhibitory quotient which allows once daily administration. It is generally well tolerated and the main side effect is hyperbilirubinemia, since ATV inhibits the hepatic uridin-glucoronyl-transferase. A signature mutation at the protease gene, I50L, may confer loss of susceptibility to the drug. Interestingly, it produces hypersusceptibility to all other PIs. When ATV is pharmacokinetically boosted with ritonavir (r) 100 mg/day, a greater genetic barrier for resistance is achieved, and generally more than 3 major PI resistance associated mutations are needed to result in ATV resistance. In drug-naïve subjects, regimens based on ATV/r have shown non-inferiority compared to lopinavir (LPV)/r (CASTLE study) or fosamprenavir/r (ALERT trial), generally with improved tolerance (less diarrhea and dyslipidemia). Given its good tolerance and convenience, ATV has been proven to be successful as a simplification strategy in switch studies (ie, SWAN and SLOAT) conducted in patients with complete virological suppression under other PI-based regimens. Finally, ATV/r-based combinations have shown to be equivalent in terms of viral response to other PI/r-containing regimens, including LPV/r, in rescue interventions in patients failing other PI regimens (ie, studies AI424-045 and NADIS).
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spelling pubmed-26975292009-06-17 Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection Rivas, Pablo Morello, Judit Garrido, Carolina Rodríguez-Nóvoa, Sonia Soriano, Vincent Ther Clin Risk Manag Review Atazanavir (ATV) is one of the latest protease inhibitors (PI) approved for the treatment of HIV infection. The drug has a relatively long-life (~7 h) and large inhibitory quotient which allows once daily administration. It is generally well tolerated and the main side effect is hyperbilirubinemia, since ATV inhibits the hepatic uridin-glucoronyl-transferase. A signature mutation at the protease gene, I50L, may confer loss of susceptibility to the drug. Interestingly, it produces hypersusceptibility to all other PIs. When ATV is pharmacokinetically boosted with ritonavir (r) 100 mg/day, a greater genetic barrier for resistance is achieved, and generally more than 3 major PI resistance associated mutations are needed to result in ATV resistance. In drug-naïve subjects, regimens based on ATV/r have shown non-inferiority compared to lopinavir (LPV)/r (CASTLE study) or fosamprenavir/r (ALERT trial), generally with improved tolerance (less diarrhea and dyslipidemia). Given its good tolerance and convenience, ATV has been proven to be successful as a simplification strategy in switch studies (ie, SWAN and SLOAT) conducted in patients with complete virological suppression under other PI-based regimens. Finally, ATV/r-based combinations have shown to be equivalent in terms of viral response to other PI/r-containing regimens, including LPV/r, in rescue interventions in patients failing other PI regimens (ie, studies AI424-045 and NADIS). Dove Medical Press 2009 2009-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2697529/ /pubmed/19436623 Text en © 2009 Rivas et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.
spellingShingle Review
Rivas, Pablo
Morello, Judit
Garrido, Carolina
Rodríguez-Nóvoa, Sonia
Soriano, Vincent
Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection
title Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection
title_full Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection
title_fullStr Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection
title_full_unstemmed Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection
title_short Role of atazanavir in the treatment of HIV infection
title_sort role of atazanavir in the treatment of hiv infection
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2697529/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19436623
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