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Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children

BACKGROUND: The antiretroviral drug nevirapine and the antimalarial artemisinin-based combination therapy artemether-lumefantrine are commonly co-administered to treat malaria in the context of HIV. Nevirapine is a known inhibitor of cytochrome P450 3A4, which metabolizes artemether and lumefantrine...

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Autores principales: Huang, Liusheng, Carey, Vincent, Lindsey, Jane C., Marzan, Florence, Gingrich, David, Graham, Bobbie, Barlow-Mosha, Linda, Ssemambo, Phionah K., Kamthunzi, Portia, Nachman, Sharon, Parikh, Sunil, Aweeka, Francesca T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29065172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186589
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author Huang, Liusheng
Carey, Vincent
Lindsey, Jane C.
Marzan, Florence
Gingrich, David
Graham, Bobbie
Barlow-Mosha, Linda
Ssemambo, Phionah K.
Kamthunzi, Portia
Nachman, Sharon
Parikh, Sunil
Aweeka, Francesca T.
author_facet Huang, Liusheng
Carey, Vincent
Lindsey, Jane C.
Marzan, Florence
Gingrich, David
Graham, Bobbie
Barlow-Mosha, Linda
Ssemambo, Phionah K.
Kamthunzi, Portia
Nachman, Sharon
Parikh, Sunil
Aweeka, Francesca T.
author_sort Huang, Liusheng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The antiretroviral drug nevirapine and the antimalarial artemisinin-based combination therapy artemether-lumefantrine are commonly co-administered to treat malaria in the context of HIV. Nevirapine is a known inhibitor of cytochrome P450 3A4, which metabolizes artemether and lumefantrine. To address the concern that the antiretroviral nevirapine impacts the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine pharmacokinetics, a prospective non-randomized controlled study in children presenting with uncomplicated malaria and HIV in sub-Saharan Africa was carried out. METHODS: Participants received artemether-lumefantrine (20/120 mg weight-based BID) for 3 days during nevirapine-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) co-administration (158–266 mg/m(2) QD). HIV positive participants who were not yet on ART drugs were also enrolled as the control group. The target enrollment was children aged 3–12 years (n = 24 in each group). Intensive pharmacokinetics after the last artemether-lumefantrine dose was assessed for artemether, its active metabolite dihydroartemisinin, and lumefantrine. Pharmacokinetic parameters (area under the plasma concentration vs. time curve (AUC), maximum concentration and day 7 lumefantrine concentrations) were estimated using non-compartmental methods and compared to controls. RESULTS: Nineteen children (16 on nevirapine and three not on ART) enrolled. Fifteen of the 16 (aged 4 to 11 years) on nevirapine-based ART were included in the pharmacokinetic analysis. Due to evolving WHO HIV treatment guidelines, insufficient children were enrolled in the control group (n = 3), so the pharmacokinetic data were compared to a historical control group of 20 HIV-uninfected children 5–12 years of age who also presented with malaria and underwent identical study procedures. Decreases of pharmacokinetic exposure [as estimated by AUC (AUC(0-8hr))] were marginally significant for artemether (by -46%, p = 0.08) and dihydroartemisinin (-22%, p = 0.06) in the children on nevirapine-based ART, compared to when artemether-lumefantrine was administered alone. Similarly, peak concentration was decreased by 50% (p = 0.07) for artemether and 36% (p = 0.01) for dihydroartemisinin. In contrast, exposure to lumefantrine increased significantly in the context of nevirapine [AUC(0-120hr):123% (p<0.001); C(day7):116% (p<0.001), C(max): 95% (p<0.001)]. CONCLUSIONS: Nevirapine-based ART increases the exposure to lumefantrine in pre-pubescent children with a trend toward diminished artemether and dihydroartemisinin exposure. These findings contrast with other studies indicating NVP reduces or results in no change in exposure of antimalarial drugs, and may be specific to this age group (4–12 years). Considering the excellent safety profile of artemether-lumefantrine, the increase in lumefantrine is not of concern. However, the reduction in artemisinin exposure may warrant further study, and suggests that dosage adjustment of artemether-lumefantrine with nevirapine-based ART in children is likely warranted.
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spelling pubmed-56553452017-11-09 Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children Huang, Liusheng Carey, Vincent Lindsey, Jane C. Marzan, Florence Gingrich, David Graham, Bobbie Barlow-Mosha, Linda Ssemambo, Phionah K. Kamthunzi, Portia Nachman, Sharon Parikh, Sunil Aweeka, Francesca T. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The antiretroviral drug nevirapine and the antimalarial artemisinin-based combination therapy artemether-lumefantrine are commonly co-administered to treat malaria in the context of HIV. Nevirapine is a known inhibitor of cytochrome P450 3A4, which metabolizes artemether and lumefantrine. To address the concern that the antiretroviral nevirapine impacts the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine pharmacokinetics, a prospective non-randomized controlled study in children presenting with uncomplicated malaria and HIV in sub-Saharan Africa was carried out. METHODS: Participants received artemether-lumefantrine (20/120 mg weight-based BID) for 3 days during nevirapine-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) co-administration (158–266 mg/m(2) QD). HIV positive participants who were not yet on ART drugs were also enrolled as the control group. The target enrollment was children aged 3–12 years (n = 24 in each group). Intensive pharmacokinetics after the last artemether-lumefantrine dose was assessed for artemether, its active metabolite dihydroartemisinin, and lumefantrine. Pharmacokinetic parameters (area under the plasma concentration vs. time curve (AUC), maximum concentration and day 7 lumefantrine concentrations) were estimated using non-compartmental methods and compared to controls. RESULTS: Nineteen children (16 on nevirapine and three not on ART) enrolled. Fifteen of the 16 (aged 4 to 11 years) on nevirapine-based ART were included in the pharmacokinetic analysis. Due to evolving WHO HIV treatment guidelines, insufficient children were enrolled in the control group (n = 3), so the pharmacokinetic data were compared to a historical control group of 20 HIV-uninfected children 5–12 years of age who also presented with malaria and underwent identical study procedures. Decreases of pharmacokinetic exposure [as estimated by AUC (AUC(0-8hr))] were marginally significant for artemether (by -46%, p = 0.08) and dihydroartemisinin (-22%, p = 0.06) in the children on nevirapine-based ART, compared to when artemether-lumefantrine was administered alone. Similarly, peak concentration was decreased by 50% (p = 0.07) for artemether and 36% (p = 0.01) for dihydroartemisinin. In contrast, exposure to lumefantrine increased significantly in the context of nevirapine [AUC(0-120hr):123% (p<0.001); C(day7):116% (p<0.001), C(max): 95% (p<0.001)]. CONCLUSIONS: Nevirapine-based ART increases the exposure to lumefantrine in pre-pubescent children with a trend toward diminished artemether and dihydroartemisinin exposure. These findings contrast with other studies indicating NVP reduces or results in no change in exposure of antimalarial drugs, and may be specific to this age group (4–12 years). Considering the excellent safety profile of artemether-lumefantrine, the increase in lumefantrine is not of concern. However, the reduction in artemisinin exposure may warrant further study, and suggests that dosage adjustment of artemether-lumefantrine with nevirapine-based ART in children is likely warranted. Public Library of Science 2017-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC5655345/ /pubmed/29065172 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186589 Text en © 2017 Huang et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Huang, Liusheng
Carey, Vincent
Lindsey, Jane C.
Marzan, Florence
Gingrich, David
Graham, Bobbie
Barlow-Mosha, Linda
Ssemambo, Phionah K.
Kamthunzi, Portia
Nachman, Sharon
Parikh, Sunil
Aweeka, Francesca T.
Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children
title Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children
title_full Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children
title_fullStr Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children
title_full_unstemmed Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children
title_short Concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in African children
title_sort concomitant nevirapine impacts pharmacokinetic exposure to the antimalarial artemether-lumefantrine in african children
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29065172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186589
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