학술논문

Brief Report: Suboptimal Lopinavir Exposure in Infants on Rifampicin Treatment Receiving Double-dosed or Semisuperboosted Lopinavir/Ritonavir: Time for a Change
Document Type
article
Source
JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. 93(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Pediatric
HIV/AIDS
Infectious Diseases
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Pediatric AIDS
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Male
Infant
Humans
Child
Female
Lopinavir
Ritonavir
Rifampin
HIV Infections
Anti-HIV Agents
HIV Protease Inhibitors
lopinavir
infants
rifampin
HIV
tuberculosis
drug-drug interaction
EMPIRICAL Clinical Trial Group
Public Health and Health Services
Virology
Clinical sciences
Epidemiology
Public health
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAlthough super-boosted lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r; ratio 4:4 instead of 4:1) is recommended for infants living with HIV and receiving concomitant rifampicin, in clinical practice, many different LPV/r dosing strategies are applied due to poor availability of pediatric separate ritonavir formulations needed to superboost. We evaluated LPV pharmacokinetics in infants with HIV receiving LPV/r dosed according to local guidelines in various sub-Saharan African countries with or without rifampicin-based tuberculosis (TB) treatment.MethodsThis was a 2-arm pharmacokinetic substudy nested within the EMPIRICAL trial (#NCT03915366). Infants aged 1-12 months recruited into the main study were administered LPV/r according to local guidelines and drug availability either with or without rifampicin-based TB treatment; during rifampicin cotreatment, they received double-dosed (ratio 8:2) or semisuperboosted LPV/r (adding a ritonavir 100 mg crushed tablet to the evening LPV/r dose). Six blood samples were taken over 12 hours after intake of LPV/r.ResultsIn total, 14/16 included infants had evaluable pharmacokinetic curves; 9/14 had rifampicin cotreatment (5 received double-dosed and 4 semisuperboosted LPV/r). The median (IQR) age was 6.4 months (5.4-9.8), weight 6.0 kg (5.2-6.8), and 10/14 were male. Of those receiving rifampicin, 6/9 infants (67%) had LPV Ctrough