4.6 Article

Nevirapine Concentration in Hair Samples Is a Strong Predictor of Virologic Suppression in a Prospective Cohort of HIV-Infected Patients

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0129100

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) of US National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  2. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
  3. National Cancer Institute (NCI)
  4. National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
  5. National Institute on Mental Health (NIMH)
  6. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR)
  7. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
  8. National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
  9. NIH Office of Research on Women's Health
  10. UCSF CTSA [UL1-TR000004]
  11. UCSF Traineeship in AIDS Prevention Studies [NIH T32 MH-19105]
  12. NIH [R01 AI098472]
  13. Bronx WIHS [U01-AI-035004]
  14. Brooklyn WIHS [U01-AI-031834]
  15. Chicago WIHS [U01-AI-034993]
  16. Metropolitan Washington WIHS [U01-AI-034994]
  17. Connie Wofsy Women's HIV Study, Northern California (NIAID/NIH) [R01 AI 65233, U01-AI-034989]
  18. WIHS Data Management and Analysis Center [U01-AI-042590]
  19. Southern California WIHS (WIHS I-WIHS IV) [U01-HD-032632]

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Effective antiretroviral (ARV) therapy depends on adequate drug exposure, yet methods to assess ARV exposure are limited. Concentrations of ARV in hair are the product of steady-state pharmacokinetics factors and longitudinal adherence. We investigated nevirapine (NVP) concentrations in hair as a predictor of treatment response in women receiving ARVs. In participants of the Women's Interagency HIV Study, who reported NVP use for >1 month from 2003-2008, NVP concentrations in hair were measured via liquid-chromatography-tandem mass-spectrometry. The outcome was virologic suppression (plasma HIV RNA below assay threshold) at the time of hair sampling and the primary predictor was nevirapine concentration categorized into quartiles. We controlled for age, race/ethnicity, pre-treatment HIV RNA, CD4 cell count, and self-reported adherence over the 6-month visit interval (categorized <= 74%, 75%-94% or >= 95%). We also assessed the relation of NVP concentration with changes in hepatic transaminase levels via multivariate random intercept logistic regression and linear regression analyses. 271 women contributed 1089 person-visits to the analysis (median 3 of semi-annual visits). Viral suppression was least frequent in concentration quartile 1 (86/178 (48.3%)) and increased in higher quartiles (to 158/204 (77.5%) for quartile 4). The odds of viral suppression in the highest concentration quartile were 9.17 times (95% CI 3.2-26, P < 0.0001) those in the lowest. African-American race was associated with lower rates of virologic suppression independent of NVP hair concentration. NVP concentration was not significantly associated with patterns of serum transaminases. Concentration of NVP in hair was a strong independent predictor of virologic suppression in women taking NVP, stronger than self-reported adherence, but did not appear to be strongly predictive of hepatotoxicity.

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