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Long-term safety and efficacy of a once-daily regimen of emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz in HIV-infected, therapy-naive children and adolescents: Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol P1021.

Publication ,  Journal Article
McKinney, RE; Rodman, J; Hu, C; Britto, P; Hughes, M; Smith, ME; Serchuck, LK; Kraimer, J; Ortiz, AA; Flynn, P; Yogev, R; Spector, S; Tran, P ...
Published in: Pediatrics
August 2007

BACKGROUND: Compliance with complex antiretroviral therapy regimens is a problem for HIV-1-infected children and their families. Simple, safe, and effective regimens are important for long-term therapeutic success. METHODS: A novel, once-daily dosing regimen of 3 antiretroviral drugs, emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz, was tested in 37 therapy-naive HIV-infected children and adolescents between 3 and 21 years of age (inclusive). Subjects were followed for > or = 96 weeks on an intention-to-treat basis. Signs, symptoms, plasma HIV-1 RNA viral load, CD4 counts, and safety laboratories were followed regularly. End points were the proportion of subjects with plasma HIV < 400 or 50 HIV copies per mL and safety and tolerability of the regimen. RESULTS: Thirty-seven subjects enrolled at 16 sites. Two subjects with rashes during the first 2 weeks of therapy were the only adverse events leading to study-drug discontinuation. Other early (before protocol-scheduled conclusion) study discontinuations included 3 viral failures on treatment and 5 patients who stopped therapy for apparently nonmedical reasons. Possible drug-related adverse events included 1 grade 4 low-glucose and 5 varied grade 3 events. There were no deaths. Virologic outcomes demonstrated that 32 (85%) of 37 subjects achieved viral suppression to < 400 RNA copies per mL, and 26 (72%) of 37 subjects maintained sustained suppression at < 50 copies per mL through week 96. The median baseline CD4 count was 310 per microL (17%), which increased at week 96 by a median of +329 cells per microL (by +18% CD4). Pharmacokinetic results were as predicted for emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz capsules, whereas efavirenz concentrations in children receiving efavirenz oral solution were lower than anticipated, requiring a dose escalation after the planned assessment point. CONCLUSIONS: A once-daily regimen of emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz proved to be safe and tolerable and demonstrated good immunologic and virologic efficacy in this 2-year study.

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Published In

Pediatrics

DOI

EISSN

1098-4275

Publication Date

August 2007

Volume

120

Issue

2

Start / End Page

e416 / e423

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Time
  • Pediatrics
  • Male
  • Humans
  • HIV-1
  • HIV Infections
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Female
  • Emtricitabine
  • Drug Administration Schedule
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
McKinney, R. E., Rodman, J., Hu, C., Britto, P., Hughes, M., Smith, M. E., … Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol P1021 Study Team, . (2007). Long-term safety and efficacy of a once-daily regimen of emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz in HIV-infected, therapy-naive children and adolescents: Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol P1021. Pediatrics, 120(2), e416–e423. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2006-0925
McKinney, Ross E., John Rodman, Chengcheng Hu, Paula Britto, Michael Hughes, Mary Elizabeth Smith, Leslie K. Serchuck, et al. “Long-term safety and efficacy of a once-daily regimen of emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz in HIV-infected, therapy-naive children and adolescents: Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol P1021.Pediatrics 120, no. 2 (August 2007): e416–23. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2006-0925.
McKinney RE, Rodman J, Hu C, Britto P, Hughes M, Smith ME, Serchuck LK, Kraimer J, Ortiz AA, Flynn P, Yogev R, Spector S, Draper L, Tran P, Scites M, Dickover R, Weinberg A, Cunningham C, Abrams E, Blum MR, Chittick GE, Reynolds L, Rathore M, Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol P1021 Study Team. Long-term safety and efficacy of a once-daily regimen of emtricitabine, didanosine, and efavirenz in HIV-infected, therapy-naive children and adolescents: Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group Protocol P1021. Pediatrics. 2007 Aug;120(2):e416–e423.

Published In

Pediatrics

DOI

EISSN

1098-4275

Publication Date

August 2007

Volume

120

Issue

2

Start / End Page

e416 / e423

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Time
  • Pediatrics
  • Male
  • Humans
  • HIV-1
  • HIV Infections
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Female
  • Emtricitabine
  • Drug Administration Schedule