Lipid
and Glucose Changes Related to Boosted Darunavir (Prezista) in Children and Adolescents
with HIV: DELPHI Study
 Ritonavir-boosted
darunavir (Prezista) was effective
and generally well-tolerated at week 48 among treatment-experienced children and
adolescents with HIV in the DELPHI study, according to a presentation at the 5th
International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment, and Prevention
(IAS 2009) last month in Cape Town, South Africa. No change was seen in glucose
levels after starting the drug, and triglyceride levels decreased significantly. |
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By
Liz Highleyman The
Phase 2, open-label DELPHI (Darunavir EvaLuation in Pediatric
HIV-1-Infected) trial included 80 pediatric HIV patients aged 6-17
years; 71% were male and 78% had been infected via mother-to-child
transmission. At baseline, the average CD4 cell count was 330 cells/mm3 and
the average CD4 percentage was 17%. Patients were highly treatment experienced,
with all having used at least 2 NRTIs,
79% having used NNRTIs, and
96% having used protease inhibitors. Participants
received twice-daily darunavir/ritonavir
dosed according to weight (11-19 mg/kg) plus an optimized background regimen containing
at least 2 other antiretroviral drugs. As
previously reported, at 48 weeks, 48% of participants had HIV RNA < 50
copies/mL, 59% had viral load < 400 copies/mL, and 65% experienced at least
a 1 log decrease in HIV RNA. Darunavir/ritonavir was generally well-tolerated
and had a good safety profile. In
the present analysis, the investigators looked specifically at metabolic changes
after starting darunavir/ritonavir. Participants were not permitted to use lipid-lowering
agents to manage elevated cholesterol or triglycerides. Blood samples were collected
at baseline and week 48 after patients had fasted for at least 10 hours. Results  | At
48 weeks, the following grade 2-4 (moderate to severe) treatment-emergent lipid
and glucose abnormalities were observed:
1 patient (1.3) with triglyceride elevation;
11 patients (13.8) with total cholesterol elevation;
11 patients (13.8) with LDL ("bad") cholesterol elevation;
9 patients (11.3) with hyperglycemia (elevated blood glucose). |
|  | 1
patient (1.3%) had HDL ("good") cholesterol above the upper limit of
normal and 5 (6.3%) had HDL below the lower limit of normal (ungraded). |  | The
average blood glucose level did not change from baseline to week 48, being slightly
above normal on both occasions. |  | Mean
total cholesterol (P < 0.05), LDL (P < 0.001), and HDL (P < 0.05) levels
all rose significantly from baseline to week 48. |  | The
mean triglyceride level, however, decreased significantly, by about 50 mg/dL (P
< 0.01). |  | The
proportion of patients with elevated triglycerides fell from 44% at baseline to
22% at week 48. |
"Darunavir/ritonavir
has a favorable lipid and glucose safety profile in treatment-experienced, HIV-1-infected
pediatric patients," the DELPHI investigators concluded."The
most frequent laboratory abnormalities were increased total cholesterol and LDL,"
they continued. "The most pronounced change was a significant reduction in
mean triglycerides from baseline to Week 48." "Small
but statistically significant mean increases in total cholesterol, LDL, and HDL
were observed," they noted. However, "no statistically significant changes
in total cholesterol/HDL ratio and mean glucose were seen." Chris
Hani Baragwanath Hospital, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South
Africa; Hospital Dos Servidores Do Estado, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil; Hospital Geral
De Nova Iguacu - HGNI DST/AIDS, Nova Iguacu, Brazil; Universidade Federal De Minas
Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil; Tibotec BVBA, Mechelen, Belgium; Hôpital
Necker Enfants Malades, Paris, France. 8/18/09 Reference T
Meyers, E Joao, JH Pilotto, and others. 48-week lipid- and glucose-related safety
profile of darunavir/ritonavir in treatment-experienced, paediatric patients in
DELPHI. 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment,
and Prevention (IAS 2009). July 19-22, 2009. Cape Town, South Africa. (Abstract
TUAB202).
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