Article (Scientific journals)
Efficacy and safety of etravirine in treatment-experienced, HIV-1 patients: pooled 48 week analysis of two randomized, controlled trials.
Katlama, Christine; Haubrich, Richard; Lalezari, Jacob et al.
2009In AIDS, 23 (17), p. 2289-300
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
 

Files


Full Text
Efficacy_and_safety_of_etravirine_in.6.pdf
Publisher postprint (436.76 kB)
Request a copy

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Abstract :
[en] OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy, safety and virologic resistance profile of etravirine (TMC125), a next-generation nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, over 48 weeks in treatment-experienced adults infected with HIV-1 strains resistant to a nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor and other antiretrovirals. DESIGN: DUET-1 (NCT00254046) and DUET-2 (NCT00255099) are two identically designed, randomized, double-blind phase III trials. METHODS: Patients received twice-daily etravirine 200 mg or placebo, each plus a background regimen of darunavir/ritonavir, investigator-selected nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors and optional enfuvirtide. Eligible patients had documented nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance, at least three primary protease inhibitor mutations at screening and were on a stable but virologically failing regimen for at least 8 weeks, with plasma viral load more than 5000 copies/ml. Pooled 48-week data from the two trials are presented. RESULTS: Patients (1203) were randomized and treated (n = 599, etravirine; n = 604, placebo). Significantly more patients in the etravirine than in the placebo group achieved viral load less than 50 copies/ml at week 48 (61 vs. 40%, respectively; P < 0.0001). Significantly fewer patients in the etravirine group experienced at least one confirmed or probable AIDS-defining illness/death (6 vs. 10%; P = 0.0408). Safety and tolerability in the etravirine group was comparable to the placebo group. Rash was the only adverse event to occur at a significantly higher incidence in the etravirine group (19 vs. 11%, respectively, P < 0.0001), occurring primarily in the second week of treatment. CONCLUSION: At 48 weeks, treatment-experienced patients receiving etravirine plus background regimen had statistically superior and durable virologic responses (viral load less than 50 copies/ml) than those receiving placebo plus background regimen, with comparable tolerability and no new safety signals reported since week 24.
Disciplines :
Immunology & infectious disease
Author, co-author :
Katlama, Christine
Haubrich, Richard
Lalezari, Jacob
Lazzarin, Adriano
Madruga, Jose V
Molina, Jean*-Michel
Schechter, Mauro
Peeters, Monika
Picchio, Gaston
Vingerhoets, Johan
Woodfall, Brian
De Smedt, Goedele
Other collaborator :
Moutschen, Michel  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences cliniques > GIGA-R:Immunopath. - Maladies infect. et médec. inter. gén.
Language :
English
Title :
Efficacy and safety of etravirine in treatment-experienced, HIV-1 patients: pooled 48 week analysis of two randomized, controlled trials.
Publication date :
2009
Journal title :
AIDS
ISSN :
0269-9370
eISSN :
1473-5571
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, London, United Kingdom
Volume :
23
Issue :
17
Pages :
2289-300
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 04 September 2010

Statistics


Number of views
52 (2 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
0 (0 by ULiège)

Scopus citations®
 
177
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
139
OpenCitations
 
145

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi