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What is the antiretroviral line up like? |
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Definition
Nucleoside/-tide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NRTIs): Abacavir, Tenofovir, Didanosine, Emtricitabine, Lamivudine, Stavudine, Zidovudine. Nonnucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NNRTIs): Delavirdine, Efavirenz, Etravirine, Nevirapine. Protease Inhibitors: Atazanavir, Darunavir, Fosamprenavir, Indinavir, Lopinavir, Nelfinavir, Ritonavir, Saquinavir, Tipranavir. Fusion Inhibitors: Enfuvirtide, Maraviroc. Integrase Inhibitor: Raltegravir |
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How do the Nucleoside/-tide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors (NRTIs) work? |
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Definition
Analog of native ribosides but lack 3`OH thus terminates elongation; renal excretion; A/Es are due to inhibition of mitochondrial DNA polymerase (peripheral neuropathy, pancreatits, lipoatrophy); other A/Es include liver toxicity (lactic acidosis, hepatomegaly with steatosis); Drug Interactions: Not many (except with zidovudine + tenofovir); Resistance: Most common mutation at viral codon 184: lamivudine (restores sensitivity to zidovudine + tenofovir), Cross-resistance between agents of same analog class can occur |
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Zidovudine (3'azido-3'deoxythymidine, ZDV, AZT) |
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Definition
Used as prophylaxis and in preventing prenatal infection. Well absorbed and crosses BBB, T1/2 of 1-3 hrs, Glucuronylated by liver + excreted in urine. Adverse effects: Bone marrow suppression (neutropenia, anemia), headaches, GI intolerance Contraindications: Toxicity potentiated by coadmin. of probenecid, acetaminophen, lorazepam, indomethacin + cimetidine. Stavudine + ribavirin activated by same pathways |
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Definition
Strong inhibitor of β and γ DNA polymerases (decreases mitochondrial DNA synthesis |
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PK: Absorption best if taken in fasting state (acid labile) or combined with antacid, Penetrates into CSF (less than AZT), 55% excreted in urine. Adverse Effects: Pancreatitis (can be fatal – monitor serum amylase), Dose limiting toxicity – peripheral neuropathy, GI intolerance Contraindications(???): Stavudine (similar toxicities) |
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Nucleotide analog. Inhibits HIV reverse transcriptase. Pharmacokinetics: Should be taken with food (increase bioavailability), Long t1/2 |
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Terminates synthesis of proviral DNA chain + inhibits HIV + HBV, RT (DOES NOT affect mitochondrial DNA synthesis or bone marrow precursor cells). Clinical Applications: Approved for treatment of HIV in combination with AZT (should not be used with other cytosine analogs) Resistance: High level resistance occurs with single amino acid substitutions. Emtricitabine (FTC) = structural relative of 3TC (can be taken once-a-day) |
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Guanosine analog. May be cross-resistance with strains resistant to AZT + 3TC. Adverse Effects: GI, headache, dizziness, 5% - ‘hypersensitivity’ reaction (one or more of rash, GI, malaise, respiratory distress). Sensitized individuals should NEVER be rechallenged (can be genetically screened) |
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MOA: Highly selective, noncompetitive inhibitors of HIV-1 RT. DO NOT REQUIRE ACTIVATION BY CELLULAR ENZYMES. Advantages: Lack of effect on host blood-forming elements, Lack of cross resistance with NRTIs. Disadvantages: Cross-resistance with NNRTIs, Drug Interactions, High incidence of hypersensitivity reactions (eg, rash) |
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Definition
Used in combo to Tx HIV-1, Well absorbed orally w/out effects from food or antacids. Crosses BBB, excreted mainly as a metabolite (CYP 3A4 + CYP 2B6 (?)). A/Es: Severe hepatotoxicity (don’t use in women with CD4+ counts >250 cells/mm3 + men >400 cells/mm3), Rash (16%), fever, headache, Dermatologic effects (Stevens-Johnson syndrome + toxic epidermal necrolysis) 14 day titration period at ½ dose is mandatory to reduce risk of serious epidermal rxn. Contra: Inducer of CYP3A4. Increases metabolism of PI’s (no dosage adjustment necessary), OC, ketoconazole, methadone, metronidazole, quinidine, theophylline + warfarin Resistance: Target site is HIV-1 specific + not essential to enzyme |
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Definition
Preferred NNRTI on DHHS guidelines (results in increased CD4+ counts + decrease in viral load) PK: Well distributed after oral admin. (bioavailability enhanced when taken with fatty meal), 99% bound to plasma albumin at therapeutic doses, T1/2 >40h (once-a-day dosing), Extensively metabolized to inactive products. A/Es: Mostly CNS (50%) (dizziness, headache, vivid dreams, loss of concentration) – resolve after few weeks. Rash (25%) Contra: Potent inducer of CYP P450 enzymes. Pregnancy (D) (can be used after 1st trimester) |
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Definition
MOA: Reversible inhibitors of HIV aspartyl protease (enzyme responsible for cleavage of viral polyprotein into RT, protease + integrase), Inhibition prevents maturation + results in production of non-infectious virions. PK: Poor oral bioavailability, High-fat meals can increase (nelfanvir + saquinavir) and decrease (indinavir) bioavailability, Substrates for CYP 3A4 (very little excreted unchanged), Substrates for P-glycoprotein pump, Bound to plasma proteins (α1-acid glycoprotein – can increase in response to trauma + surgery). A/Es: Parathesias, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea; Disturbance in lipid metabolism (diabetes, hypertriglyceridemia, hypercholesterolemia); Chronic admin |
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How does Enfuvirtide (T-20) work? |
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Definition
First approved drug that inhibits viral attachment. Approved for use in treatment-experienced adults with evidence of HIV replication. MOA: Structurally similar to gp41 (HIV protein mediates membrane fusion), Prevents ability of virion to fuse membranes. Pharmacokinetics: Has to be administered parenterally (twice daily subcutaneous injections) Adverse Effects: Injection-related (3% discontinue), Hypersensitivity reactions (rarely), Eosinophilia has been noted. |
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Definition
MOA: Blocks CCR5 coreceptor that works with gp41 to facilitate HIV entry through cell membrane (only CCR5-expressing virus can be treated with maraviroc) Pharmacokinetics: Well absorbed orally, Metabolized by CYP 3A4 (dose reduced when given with PIs) Adverse Effects: Well tolerated, risk of hepatotoxicity |
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How does Raltegravir work? |
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Definition
Clinical Applications: In combination with other antiretrovirals is approved for treatment-experienced and treatment-naive patients with evidence of viral replication. MOA: Specifically inhibits final step in integration of viral DNA into host cell DNA. Pharmacokinetics: t1/2 = ~9h |
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What's the Combo therapy? |
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What is the HIV prophylaxis guidelines? |
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