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Patterns
of Drug Resistance Emerging from Patients Undergoing Intensification
Therapy with Tenofovir
Study
GS-99-907 was a 48-week, phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled
intensification trial
of tenofovir disoproxil
fumarate/ tenofovir DF (Viread). Antiretroviral-experienced
patients added tenofovir DF 300 mg once daily to their existing
regimen.
The
patterns of HIV-1 resistance development and the corresponding virologic
responses were evaluated in a virology substudy at week
48.
Although
94% of these treatment-experienced patients had nucleoside-associated
resistance mutations (NAMs) at baseline, addition
of tenofovir DF resulted in a mean reduction in viral load of -0.59
log10 copies/mL after 24 weeks that was durable through 48 weeks.
Relative
to the placebo-controlled arm, patients in the tenofovir DF arm
had a reduced frequency of development of resistance mutations to
all classes of HIV-1 inhibitors, with reduction in new protease
inhibitor (PI)-associated mutations achieving statistical
significance.
The
K65R mutation, which occurred in 8 patients (3%), was the only emergent
mutation directly associated with tenofovir DF therapy. New thymidine
analogue-associated mutations (TAMs) emerged in 19% of
patients by week 48.
Other
than K65R, the patterns of mutations that developed were not significantly
different between the tenofovir DF and placebo control arms, suggesting
that the background therapies caused their development.
The
K65R mutation emerged only in patients with no detectable TAMs at
baseline, whereas new TAMs developed similarly between patients
with or without TAMs at baseline.
Development
of K65R was associated with mostly low-level changes in phenotypic
susceptibility to tenofovir DF and other nucleoside
reverse transcriptase inhibitors and was not associated
with viral
load rebound.
The
authors conclude, “No novel patterns of genotypic or phenotypic
resistance to tenofovir were identified. Therefore, intensification
with once-daily tenofovir DF therapy resulted in a sustained reduction
in HIV-1 viral load and a low risk for development of the K65R mutation
in this treatment-experienced patient population.”
From
Gilead Sciences, Inc., Foster City, CA.
10/20/04
Reference
D
J McColl and others. Patterns of Resistance Emerging in HIV-1 From Antiretroviral-Experienced
Patients Undergoing Intensification Therapy With Tenofovir Disoproxil
Fumarate. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes 37(3):
1340-1350, November 1, 2004.
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