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Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial

Background: The POTENT trial compared the safety and efficacy of tipranavir/ritonavir (TPV/r) to darunavir/ritonavir (DRV/r), each with an optimized background regimen (OBR) in triple-class experienced HIV-1-infected patients with resistance to more than one protease inhibitor (PI). Methodology/Prin...

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Autores principales: Elgadi, Mabrouk M., Piliero, Peter J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3585832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22007990
http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/11596340-000000000-00000
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author Elgadi, Mabrouk M.
Piliero, Peter J.
author_facet Elgadi, Mabrouk M.
Piliero, Peter J.
author_sort Elgadi, Mabrouk M.
collection PubMed
description Background: The POTENT trial compared the safety and efficacy of tipranavir/ritonavir (TPV/r) to darunavir/ritonavir (DRV/r), each with an optimized background regimen (OBR) in triple-class experienced HIV-1-infected patients with resistance to more than one protease inhibitor (PI). Methodology/Principal Findings: POTENT was a prospective, open-label study of triple-class (PI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors [NNRTI], nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors [NRTI]), treatment-experienced, HIVpositive patients. Subjects were randomized to either TPV/r (500/200mg twice daily) or DRV/r (600/100mg twice daily) on a genotype-guided, investigatorselected OBR. CD4+ counts andHIV viral loads were assayed at key timepoints. The primary endpoint was time to virologic failure (viral load >-500 copies/mL). POTENT was prematurely terminated due to slow enrollment. Thirty-nine patients were treated with either TPV/r (n= 19) or DRV/r (n= 20); 82% were male, 77%White, with mean age of 43.6 years. Mean baselineHIV RNA was 3.9 log10 copies/mL.Median prior antiretrovirals was 11, with no prior raltegravir or maraviroc exposure. Raltegravir was the most common novel class agent in the OBRs (n = 14 TPV/r; n = 12DRV/r). In both groups, patients achieved mean viral load decreases >-2 log10 copies/mL by week 8, and by week 12 mean CD4+ counts rose by 40–50 cells/mm(3). Total observation time was 32 weeks. Drug-related adverse events were reported in 21% (TPV/r) and 25% (DRV/r) of patients. Conclusions/Significance: TPV/r- and DRV/r-based regimens showed similar short-term safety and efficacy. These data support the use of next-generation PIs such as tipranavir or darunavir with novel class antiretroviral agents (integrase inhibitors, CCR5 antagonists, or fusion inhibitors). Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00517192
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spelling pubmed-35858322013-03-07 Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial Elgadi, Mabrouk M. Piliero, Peter J. Drugs R D Short Communication Background: The POTENT trial compared the safety and efficacy of tipranavir/ritonavir (TPV/r) to darunavir/ritonavir (DRV/r), each with an optimized background regimen (OBR) in triple-class experienced HIV-1-infected patients with resistance to more than one protease inhibitor (PI). Methodology/Principal Findings: POTENT was a prospective, open-label study of triple-class (PI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors [NNRTI], nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors [NRTI]), treatment-experienced, HIVpositive patients. Subjects were randomized to either TPV/r (500/200mg twice daily) or DRV/r (600/100mg twice daily) on a genotype-guided, investigatorselected OBR. CD4+ counts andHIV viral loads were assayed at key timepoints. The primary endpoint was time to virologic failure (viral load >-500 copies/mL). POTENT was prematurely terminated due to slow enrollment. Thirty-nine patients were treated with either TPV/r (n= 19) or DRV/r (n= 20); 82% were male, 77%White, with mean age of 43.6 years. Mean baselineHIV RNA was 3.9 log10 copies/mL.Median prior antiretrovirals was 11, with no prior raltegravir or maraviroc exposure. Raltegravir was the most common novel class agent in the OBRs (n = 14 TPV/r; n = 12DRV/r). In both groups, patients achieved mean viral load decreases >-2 log10 copies/mL by week 8, and by week 12 mean CD4+ counts rose by 40–50 cells/mm(3). Total observation time was 32 weeks. Drug-related adverse events were reported in 21% (TPV/r) and 25% (DRV/r) of patients. Conclusions/Significance: TPV/r- and DRV/r-based regimens showed similar short-term safety and efficacy. These data support the use of next-generation PIs such as tipranavir or darunavir with novel class antiretroviral agents (integrase inhibitors, CCR5 antagonists, or fusion inhibitors). Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00517192 Springer International Publishing 2012-11-27 2011-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3585832/ /pubmed/22007990 http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/11596340-000000000-00000 Text en © Elgadi & Piliero, publisher and licensee Adis Data Information BV 2011
spellingShingle Short Communication
Elgadi, Mabrouk M.
Piliero, Peter J.
Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial
title Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial
title_full Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial
title_fullStr Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial
title_full_unstemmed Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial
title_short Boosted Tipranavir versus Darunavir in Treatment-Experienced Patients: Observational Data from the Randomized POTENT Trial
title_sort boosted tipranavir versus darunavir in treatment-experienced patients: observational data from the randomized potent trial
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3585832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22007990
http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/11596340-000000000-00000
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