Switching to emtricitabine, tenofovir and rilpivirine as single tablet regimen in virologically suppressed HIV-1-infected patients: a cohort study

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TitreSwitching to emtricitabine, tenofovir and rilpivirine as single tablet regimen in virologically suppressed HIV-1-infected patients: a cohort study
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuteursGantner P., Reinhart S., Partisani M., Baldeyrou M., Batard M-L, Bernard-Henry C., Cheneau C., de Mautort E., Priester M., Fafi-Kremer S., Muret P., Rey D.
JournalHIV MEDICINE
Volume16
Pagination132-136
Date PublishedFEB
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1464-2662
Mots-clésantiretroviral, Efficacy, Pharmacokinetic, rilpivirine, Safety, single tablet regimen, Switch
Résumé

ObjectivesEmtricitabine/tenofovir/rilpivirine as a single-tablet regimen (STR) is widely used without licence in treatment-experienced patients. The purpose of this retrospective observational study was to assess viral suppression of ART-experienced patients switching to STR. MethodsWe assessed 131 pretreated patients switching to STR with HIV RNA <400 HIV-1 RNA copies/mL. The primary outcome measure was the proportion of patients at week 24 with HIV RNA <40 copies/mL. ResultsBy week 24, eight patients had stopped STR: four because of adverse events and four for other reasons. Three virological failures were observed; among these, at least one patient developed cross-resistance to nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs), in particular with the E138K pattern. In intent-to-treat analysis, 92% of participants (120 of 131) achieved HIV RNA <40 copies/mL. Only grade 1 to 2 adverse events were observed, mainly consisting of increased liver enzymes (n=33). Systemic exposure to rilpivirine was above the usually observed steady-state levels for the 18 measurements assessed. ConclusionsEfficacy and tolerability are similar to those in treatment-naive patients.

DOI10.1111/hiv.12183