edoc

Implementation of raltegravir in routine clinical practice : selection criteria for choosing this drug, virologic response rates, and characteristics of failures

Scherrer, Alexandra U. and von Wyl, Viktor and Fux, Christof A. and Opravil, Milos and Bucher, Heiner C. and Fayet, Aurélie and Decosterd, Laurent A. and Hirschel, Bernhard and Khanlari, Bettina and Yerly, Sabine and Klimkait, Thomas and Furrer, Hansjakob and Ledergerber, Bruno and Günthard, Huldrych F.. (2010) Implementation of raltegravir in routine clinical practice : selection criteria for choosing this drug, virologic response rates, and characteristics of failures. JAIDS: journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes, Vol. 53, H. 4. pp. 464-471.

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6004317

Downloads: Statistics Overview

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Raltegravir (RAL) achieved remarkable virologic suppression rates in randomized-clinical trials, but today efficacy data and factors for treatment failures in a routine clinical care setting are limited. METHODS: First, factors associated with a switch to RAL were identified with a logistic regression including patients from the Swiss HIV Cohort Study with a history of 3 class failure (n = 423). Second, predictors for virologic outcome were identified in an intent-to-treat analysis including all patients who received RAL. Last observation carried forward imputation was used to determine week 24 response rate (HIV-1 RNA <or= 50 copies/mL). RESULTS: The predominant factor associated with a switch to RAL in patients with suppressed baseline RNA was a regimen containing enfuvirtide [odds ratio 41.9 (95% confidence interval: 11.6-151.6)]. Efficacy analysis showed an overall response rate of 80.9% (152/188), whereas 71.8% (84/117) and 95.8% (68/71) showed viral suppression when stratified for detectable and undetectable RNA at baseline, respectively. Overall CD4 cell counts increased significantly by 42 cells/microL (P > 0.001). Characteristics of failures were a genotypic sensitivity score of the background regimen >or=1, very low RAL plasma concentrations, poor adherence, and high viral load at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Virologic suppression rates in our routine clinical care setting were promising and comparable with data from previously published randomized-controlled trials.
Faculties and Departments:03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Klinische Forschung > Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics CEB > Klinische Epidemiologie (Bucher H)
03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Biomedizin > Division of Medical Microbiology > Molecular Virology (Klimkait)
UniBasel Contributors:Klimkait, Thomas and Bucher, Heiner C.
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
ISSN:1525-4135
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Related URLs:
Identification Number:
Last Modified:24 May 2013 09:12
Deposited On:26 Apr 2013 06:55

Repository Staff Only: item control page