Use of Maraviroc in HIV-1-Infected Paediatric Patients in Clinical
Transcripción
Use of Maraviroc in HIV-1-Infected Paediatric Patients in Clinical
Use of Maraviroc in HIV-1-Infected Paediatric Patients in Clinical Practice 950 C. Palladino1, ML. Navarro Gomez2, P. Soler-Palacín3, MI. González-Tomé4, S. J. de Ory5, M. Espiau3,JA. León-Leal6, C. Fortuny7, V. Briz8 the CoRISpe working group 1 Research Institute for Medicines (iMed.ULisboa), Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal; 2 Servicio de Pediatría, Hospital General Universitario ‘Gregorio Marañón‘, Madrid, Spain; 3 Unitat de Patologia Infecciosa i Immunodeficiències de Pediatria, Hospital Universitari Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona, Spain; 4 Servicio de Infecciosas Pediátricas, Hospital Universitario ‘Doce de Octubre’, Madrid, Spain; 5 Laboratorio InmunoBiología Molecular, Hospital General Universitario ‘Gregorio Marañón‘. Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria ‘Gregorio Marañón‘ (IiSGM), Madrid, Spain. Networking Research Center on Bioengineering, Biomaterials and Nanomedicine (CIBER-BBN), Spain; 6 Unidad Medicina Interna Pediátrica, Hospital Infantil Universitario ‘Virgen del Rocío‘, Seville, Spain; 7 Unitat d´Infectologia, Servei de Pediatria; Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; 8 Viral Infection and Immunity Lab. Area of Molecular Pathology. National Center for Microbiology, Madrid, Spain. Background New potent therapeutic options are needed for HIV-1-infected paediatric patients who are treatment experienced and harbour highly drug-resistant viruses. Maraviroc (MVC), the first CCR5-antagonist approved to treat adults with R5-variants, is not yet authorised in paediatric patients (1-3). Table 1. baseline. Characteristics Baseline characteristics Age in years; median (IQR) Gender, girls; n (%) Ethnicity, caucasian; HIV subtype; Objective To evaluate the effectiveness, safety and tolerability of MVC-based salvage therapy outside clinical trials in HIV-1-vertically infected children (2–12yrs old) and adolescents (13-19yrs old). Patients & Methods Multicenter retrospective study of 20 HIV-1 vertically-infected paediatric patients (≤19yrs) ART-experienced and who initiated a MVCbased therapy. Individuals were monitored from baseline (MVC initiation date) until the administrative censoring date (May 31, 2014) or MVC discontinuation if occurred. Immunological, virological and clinical status at baseline and during follow-up was analysed every 3-6 months. Viral tropism was determined by phenotypic assays (Trocai and Trofile®) or by the genotypic assay geno2pheno. MVC was administered in tablet formulation and doses ranged from 100-300 mg twice daily for children and 150-600 mg twice daily for adolescents, according to body weight and comedications. the patients at N=20 15.1 (12.9-16.3) n (%) Table 2. Outcome of the use of MVC in the study population. Outcome N=20 Weeks of MVC regimen; Responders (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL) 16 (80%) Insufficient HIV-1 RNA response 4 (20.0) HIV-1 RNA log copies/mL; 17 (85.0) CD4 count, cells/µL; Unknown 3 (15.0) CD4%, cells/µL; Adherence, n (%) R5 16 (80.0) D/M 1 (5.0) Unknown 3 (15.0) HIV-1 RNA log copies/mL; CD4 count, cells/µL; median (IQR) median (IQR) Immune category, 4.0 (3.2-4.9) 382 (191-662) 22.0 (14.4-28.7) median (IQR) n (%) ≥500 cells/µL 9 (45.0) 200-499 cells/µL 6 (30.0) <200 cells/µL 5 (25.0) Clinical category C; 10 (50.0) n (%) Patients exposed to mono- and/or dualtherapy prior MVC initiation; n (%) 115.6 (25.1–198.2) 17 (85.0) n (%) CD4%, cells/µL; median (IQR) 13 (65.0) B HIV-1 tropism; MVC is currently under evaluation in an openlabel, non-comparative trial (A4001031) in CCR5-tropic HIV-1-infected antiretroviral therapy (ART)-experienced patients aged 2-17 years. of 15 (75.0) Years of HAART prior MVC; median (IQR) 10.7 (9.4-12.8) HAART regimens prior MVC; median (IQR) 3.0 (2.3-4.8) Legend: IQR, interquartile range; R5, CCR5-tropic variants; D/M, dual/mixed-tropic variants; HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy; MVC, maraviroc. Results At baseline, median viral load (VL) was 3.8 log and 4.1 log in children and adolescents; median CD4 cell was 25% and 22%, respectively (Tab1). Genotypic resistance profile showed a median of 3 major PI mutations, 2 NNRTI mutations, and 5 NRTI mutations. 10 (53%) patients showed highlevel resistance to ≥5 NRTIs and 10 (53%) patients had high-level resistance to NRTIs, NNRTIs and PIs. At least 1 fully active drug was prescribed to 18 (95%) patients as backbone regimen, of whom 17 (94%) received MVC with one or more new drugs (DRV/r, ETR, RLT). median (IQR) median (IQR) (N=19) median (IQR) (N=18) Mild adverse events related therapy were reported. 27.3 (23.2-32.1) n (%) 4 (20.0) Good 9 (45.0) Moderate 2 (10.0) Poor 5 (25.0) n (%) Hypercholesterolemia (>170mg/dl) 9 (45.0) Hypertriglyceridemia (>150mg/dl) 12 (60.0) (<45mg/dl) MVC-based 2 adolescents died and 8 subjects interrupted MVC (Tab3). Table 3. Cause of MVC interruption and underlying cause of death. Cause of MVC interruption N=20 Death 2 (10.0) Simplification 3 (15.0) Virological failure 1 (5.0) X4 or D/M variants emergence HDL reduction (N=12) to 1.7 (1.6-3.8) 558 (429-880) Complete Laboratory data, Immunological improvement was observed in 14/20 patients (11 responders and 3 nonresponders) with median increase of 275 CD4 cells/µl (IQR:135–500). 1 (8.3) ALT increase (N=19)* 4 (21.1) AST increase (N=17)* -- Legend: X4, CXCR4-tropic variants; D/M, dual/mixed-tropic variants; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; MVC, maraviroc.* ALT and AST increases were classified according to the following references: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhanes/nhanes_03_04/l40_c_met_aspartate_aminotransferase.pdf and http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhanes/nhanes_05_06/biopro_d_met_alt.pdf Reasons for MVC initiation: virological failure and/or resistance mutations to previous regimens (n=14; 70%); PI-associated lipodystrophy (n=1; 5%); simplification (n=1; 5%); improve adherence and ART toxicities (n=1; 5%); ART toxicity or drug interactions (n=2; 10%); ART intensification (n=1; 5%). 16 (80%) patients reached undetectable VL <50 cop/ml (uVL) [(median at 13 weeks, (5–35)] with a median decrease in VL from baseline of 1.7 log (Tab2). 12/16 (75%) maintained uVL for a median of 105 weeks (IQR:44–208) of which 9/12 (75%) patients maintained uVL until the end of the study for a median of 132 (50-230) weeks. Among patients with confirmed R5-tropism, 14/16 (88%) reached uVL [(median at 18.1 weeks, (IQR:5.5–38.5)] with a median VL decrease of 1.7 log; 11/16 (69%) maintained uVL for 120 weeks (IQR:49-228). Poor adherence 3 (15.0) 1 (5.0) Cause of death N=2 Hypertensive cerebral haemorrhage 1 Wasting syndrome 1 Legend: X4, CXCR4-tropic variants; D/M, dual/mixed-tropic variants; MVC, maraviroc. Conclusions MVC is useful as a salvage therapy in paediatric patients with confirmed R5 tropism and extensive resistance profile, leading to maintained virological suppression in up to 88% of the study population. MVC appears to have a favourable safety profile. The likelihood of the treatment’s success might increase when MVC is combined with other active drugs. Acknowledgments To the patients and the collaborating centers for their participation. References 1.FDA. http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/ 2007/022128lbl.pdf. 2007. 2.EMA. http://www.ema.europa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_ library/EPAR_Product_Information/human/000811/WC5000221 90.pdf. 2007. 3.Gulick RM, et al. N Engl J Med 2008. Co-responding authors: [email protected] 22nd Conference On Retroviruses And Opportunistic Infections, Seattle; February 23-26, 2015 [email protected]