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Préférences

fermer ce livreGuidelines to Antiretroviral Drug Therapy in Kenya (WHO; 2001; 78 pages)
Afficher le documentFOREWORD
Afficher le documentACKNOWLEDGMENT
fermer ce répertoireCHAPTER ONE: INITIATING ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY
Afficher le document1.1 Introduction
Afficher le document1.2 Guidelines to making a diagnosis of HIV infection
Afficher le document1.3 Laboratory Diagnosis of HIV infection
Afficher le document1.4 Goals of therapy
Afficher le document1.5 When to start therapy
Afficher le document1.6 Risks and benefits of delayed initiation of therapy and of early therapy in the Asymptomatic HIV-Infected Patient
Afficher le document1.7 Antiretroviral profile
Afficher le document1.8 What drug combination to start with?
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER TWO: MONITORING AND CHANGING THERAPY
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER THREE: PHARMACOTHERAPEUTICS OF ARVS
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER FOUR: GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF ANTIRETROVIRAL DRUGS IN PAEDIATRIC HIV INFECTION
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER FIVE: MANAGEMENT OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS (HIV) INFECTED PREGNANT WOMEN AND PREVENTION OF MOTHER TO CHILD TRANSMISSION (MTCT) OF HIV
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER SIX: SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER SEVEN: WHEN TO STOP TREATMENT (INTERRUPTIONS)
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuCHAPTER EIGHT: GUIDELINES FOR POST EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS
Afficher le documentCHAPTER NINE: ACCESS TO DRUGS IN KENYA
ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuAPPENDICES
Afficher le documentBACK COVER
 

1.8 What drug combination to start with?

Initiation of Therapy

Leading Regimens to consider

2 Nucleoside RTI's + Protease Inhibitor

- NNRTI sparing


2 Nucleoside RTI's + Non-Nucleoside RTI

- PI sparing


3 Nucleoside RTI's (including abacavir)

- PI and NNRTI sparing


Advantages and disadvantages of class sparing regimens

Regimen

Possible Advantages

Possible Disadvantages

Drug Interaction Complications

Impact on future Options

PI based HAART regimen (NNRTI-sparing)

clinical, virologic, and mmunologic efficacy well-documented.
Continued benefits sometimes seen despite viral breakthrough.
Resistance requires multiple mutations
Targets HIV at two steps of viral replication (RT and PI)

May be difficult to use and adhere to Long-term side effects may include lipodystrophy,* hyperlipidemia, and insulin resistance

Mild to severe inhibition of cytochrome P450 pathway; Ritonavir is most potent inhibitor, but this effect can exploited to boost levels of other Pis

Preserves NNRTI for use in treatment failure
Resistance primes for cross-resistance with other Pis

NNRTIs-based HAART regimen (PI-sparing)

Sparing of PI-related side effects
Generally easier to use and adhere to compared with Pis

Comparability to PI-containing regimens with regard to clinical endpoints unknown
Resistance Conferred by single or few mutations

Fewer drug-drug interactions Pis

Preserves Pis for later use
Resistance usually leads to cross resistance across entire NNRTI class

Triple NRTI Regimen (NNRTI -and PI-sparing)

Generally easier to Use and adhere to compared with PIs
Sparing of PI and NNRTI side effects
Resistance to 1 NRTI does not confer cross-resistance to entire class

Compatibility to PI-containing regimens with regard to clinical endpoints unknown
Long-term virologic efficacy with high baseline plasma vital load (i.e.,> 100 000 copies/ml may be suboptimal

Generally manageable drug interaction problems

Preserves both PI and NNRTI classes for later use
Limited cross-resistance within the NRTI class

• Some side effects being attributed to protease inhibitor therapy, such as lipodystrophy, have not been proven to be strictly associated with use of protease inhibitor-containing regimens. Lipodystrophy has also been discerened uncommonly in patients on NRTIs alone and patients on other antiretroviral therapy.

Possible first line Regimen for Adults (with substitutions)

Zidovudine/Lamivudine/Nelfinavir (or LPV or Indinavir)

- Stavudine for Zidovudine (in case of toxicity)


Zidovudine/Lamivudine/Efavirenz (or Nevirapine)

- Stavudine for Zidovudine (in case of toxicity)


Zidovudine/Lamivudine/Abacavir

- Stavudine for Zidovudine (in case of toxicity)


Stavudine, Didanosine, Efavirenz

Stavudine, Lamivudine, Nelfinavir

Stavudine, Didanosine, Nevirapine

The choice of regimen should take consideration of patient's affordability, drug potency and other factors detailed in this book.

There is an interim WHO ARV Treatment Working Group drafting guidelines for Resource Poor Settings. Kenya is a member of the steering team and the recommended 1st line drugs will be indicated in the 2nd Edition of this booklet.

The following table of recommendations is based on IAS and DHHS guidelines for antiretroviral therapy.

Antiretroviral drug regimens are comprised of one choice each from column A and B. Drugs are listed in alphabetical and not in priority order.

Strongly recommended

Column A

Column B

 

Efavirenz

Stavudine + Didanosine

 

Indinavir

Stavudine + Lamivudine

 

Nelfinavir

Zidovudine + Didanosine

 

Ritonavir + Indinavir

 
 

Ritonavir + Lopinavir

 
 

Ritonavir + Saquinavir

 

Recommended as alternatives

Column A

Column B

 

Abacavir

Didanosine + Lamivudine

 

Amprenavir

Zidovudine + Zalcitabine

 

Delarvidine

 
 

Nelfinavir + Saquinavir

 
 

Ritonavir

 
 

Saquinavir

 

No recommendation/ insufficient data

Hyroxyurea in combination with antiretroviral drugs

 
 

Ritonavir + Amprenavir.

 
 

Ritonavir + Nelfinavir

 

Not recommended/should not be offered

All monotherapies whether from column A or B including Hydroxyurea

 
 

Column A

Column B

 

Saquinavir (Invirase) except with Ritonavir

Stavudine + Zidovudine

   

Zalcitabine + Didanosine

   

Zalcitabine + Lamivudine

   

Zalcitabine + Stavudine

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