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Officials
Answer Charge That Short-course Nevirapine Leads to Drug Resistance
By
Frank Nyakairu
The
NNRTI* nevirapine
(Viramune), a key anti-HIV/AIDS drug distributed in Africa
to HIV-infected pregnant women, can cause subsequent drug
resistance, but only if prescribing orders on how to take
the pills are not followed, say medical officials.
Nevirapine
is distributed as part of President Bush's high-profile bid to fight
the spread of the disease in Africa.
The
announcement confirms in part media reports that suggested single
doses of nevirapine, used to prevent transmission of the virus from
HIV-positive mothers to their infants, could result in resistance
to future treatment.
Uganda's
Makerere University Medical School and two U.S. institutions issued
a joint statement on Monday in a bid "to clarify the scientific
facts, based on the full body of evidence."
They
were the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the U.S.-based
Elisabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
The
statement did not comment on allegations that trials of the drug
at Kampala's Mulago Hospital failed to meet international standards,
and that the U.S. rolled-out nevirapine across Africa despite concerns
over the tests.
"It
is true that resistance has been shown to occur in those receiving
short-course nevirapine," said the joint statement in the Ugandan
capital.
It
was issued by Dr Laura A. Guay, associate professor of pathology
and pediatrics at Johns Hopkins University, and Dr Phillipa Musoke,
head of pediatrics at Makerere University Medical School.
"The
problem of drug resistance has partly been as a result of violations
in prescription rules. However, to date, there is no evidence of
negative clinical outcomes as a result of subsequent antiretroviral
therapy," the statement said.
South
Africa's ruling African National Congress (ANC) on Friday accused
U.S. health officials of treating Africans like guinea pigs by agreeing
to distribute nevirapine despite concerns over the trials.
The
ANC repeated media reports that the U.S. National Institutes of
Health (NIH) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration halted a
U.S. audit on the drug because of fears over the Ugandan tests.
The
reports said the NIH failed to pass those concerns on to the White
House before the roll-out of nevirapine across Africa.
Officials
at NIH have said there was no need to inform the White House because
the drug's effectiveness was not at issue, only that there were
"observed procedural deficiencies" in the Ugandan trials.
"NIH
officials did not directly inform the White House of these procedural
problems identified in early 2002 because they had no bearing on
the safety and efficacy of single-dose nevirapine used to prevent
mother-to-infant transmission of HIV," said a spokesman for
the U.S. National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
a unit of NIH.
The
U.S.-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will now run
tests to examine the long-term effects of taking a single dose of
nevirapine on women's later response to a range of antiretroviral
treatments, the statement said.
*NNRTI:
non nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor anti-HIV drug.
01/03/05
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