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Failures
of Scheduled Treatment Interruptions: One Week On, One Week Off
Scheduled
treatment interruptions (STI) are being evaluated in an effort
to decrease costs and side effects of highly active antiretroviral
therapy (HAART). A schedule of 1 week on and 1 week off therapy
offers the promise of 50% less drug exposure with continuously undetectable
HIV RNA concentration.
In
the Staccato study, 600 patients on successful HAART were to be
randomized to either continued therapy, CD4-guided therapy, or one
week on, one week off therapy.
A
scheduled preliminary analysis evaluated effectiveness in the 1-week-on-1-week-off
arm.
Of
36 evaluable patients, 19 (53%) had two successive HIV RNA concentrations
> 500 copies/ml at the end of the
week off therapy, and were classified as virological failure.
Most
of those who failed (11 patients) took Videx (didanosine), Zerit
(stavudine), Fortovase (saquinavir), and Norvir (ritonavir). In
these patients, there was no evidence of mutations suggestive of
drug resistance, and plasma saquinavir levels were within the expected
range.
Two
of three patients failing on triple nucleotides had drug resistance
mutations, but nonetheless responded to reintroduction of triple
nucleotide therapy. One of two patients taking Viramune (nevirapine),
and one of eight taking Sustiva (efavirenz), also failed. Both had
resistance mutations at the time of failure, but not at baseline.
The
1-week-on-1-week-off schedule, as tested in the Staccato study,
showed an unacceptably high failure rate and was therefore terminated.
10/10/03
Reference
J
Ananworanich and others ( The Swiss HIV Cohort Study).
Failures of 1 week on, 1 week off antiretroviral therapies in a randomized
trial AIDS 17(15): F33-F37. October 17, 2003.
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