Efficacy and safety of three antiretroviral regimens for initial treatment of HIV-1: a randomized clinical trial in diverse multinational settings. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Antiretroviral regimens with simplified dosing and better safety are needed to maximize the efficiency of antiretroviral delivery in resource-limited settings. We investigated the efficacy and safety of antiretroviral regimens with once-daily compared to twice-daily dosing in diverse areas of the world. METHODS AND FINDINGS: 1,571 HIV-1-infected persons (47% women) from nine countries in four continents were assigned with equal probability to open-label antiretroviral therapy with efavirenz plus lamivudine-zidovudine (EFV+3TC-ZDV), atazanavir plus didanosine-EC plus emtricitabine (ATV+DDI+FTC), or efavirenz plus emtricitabine-tenofovir-disoproxil fumarate (DF) (EFV+FTC-TDF). ATV+DDI+FTC and EFV+FTC-TDF were hypothesized to be non-inferior to EFV+3TC-ZDV if the upper one-sided 95% confidence bound for the hazard ratio (HR) was ≤1.35 when 30% of participants had treatment failure. An independent monitoring board recommended stopping study follow-up prior to accumulation of 472 treatment failures. Comparing EFV+FTC-TDF to EFV+3TC-ZDV, during a median 184 wk of follow-up there were 95 treatment failures (18%) among 526 participants versus 98 failures among 519 participants (19%; HR 0.95, 95% CI 0.72-1.27; p = 0.74). Safety endpoints occurred in 243 (46%) participants assigned to EFV+FTC-TDF versus 313 (60%) assigned to EFV+3TC-ZDV (HR 0.64, CI 0.54-0.76; p<0.001) and there was a significant interaction between sex and regimen safety (HR 0.50, CI 0.39-0.64 for women; HR 0.79, CI 0.62-1.00 for men; p = 0.01). Comparing ATV+DDI+FTC to EFV+3TC-ZDV, during a median follow-up of 81 wk there were 108 failures (21%) among 526 participants assigned to ATV+DDI+FTC and 76 (15%) among 519 participants assigned to EFV+3TC-ZDV (HR 1.51, CI 1.12-2.04; p = 0.007). CONCLUSION: EFV+FTC-TDF had similar high efficacy compared to EFV+3TC-ZDV in this trial population, recruited in diverse multinational settings. Superior safety, especially in HIV-1-infected women, and once-daily dosing of EFV+FTC-TDF are advantageous for use of this regimen for initial treatment of HIV-1 infection in resource-limited countries. ATV+DDI+FTC had inferior efficacy and is not recommended as an initial antiretroviral regimen. TRIAL REGISTRATION: www.ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00084136. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.

authors

  • Gulick, Roy M
  • Campbell, Thomas B
  • Smeaton, Laura M
  • Kumarasamy, N
  • Flanigan, Timothy
  • Klingman, Karin L
  • Firnhaber, Cynthia
  • Grinsztejn, Beatriz
  • Hosseinipour, Mina C
  • Kumwenda, Johnstone
  • Lalloo, Umesh
  • Riviere, Cynthia
  • Sanchez, Jorge
  • Melo, Marineide
  • Supparatpinyo, Khuanchai
  • Tripathy, Srikanth
  • Martinez, Ana I
  • Nair, Apsara
  • Walawander, Ann
  • Moran, Laura
  • Chen, Yun
  • Snowden, Wendy
  • Rooney, James F
  • Uy, Jonathan
  • Schooley, Robert T
  • De Gruttola, Victor
  • Hakim, James Gita

publication date

  • August 14, 2012

Research

keywords

  • Anti-HIV Agents
  • Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active
  • HIV Infections
  • HIV-1
  • Internationality

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3419182

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84865566725

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001290

PubMed ID

  • 22936892

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 9

issue

  • 8