Coverage of 2008
International AIDS Conference
August 3–8, 2008, Mexico City, Mexico
Mexican study may forecast advanced naíves
by Paul Dalton, August 5, 2008
Data from a study called the ‘Mexican 5142 study’ were
presented today at the International AIDS Conference in Mexico
City. The study, a head-to-head study of Sustiva (efavirenz) vs.
Kaletra (lopinavir + ritonavir) in people with CD4 counts below
200 who start first line HIV therapy, showed Sustiva to be more
potent than Kaletra in this group.
This study enrolled 189 people in several centers around Mexico.
Everyone had CD4 counts below 200/mL and had never taken HIV treatment.
The presenter, Dr. Sierra Madero, pointed out that in Mexico, and
throughout Latin America, this represents a common situation for
first line HIV therapy.
Participants were randomly chosen to take either the older, soft
gel formulation of Kaletra or Sustiva, along with the fixed-dose
combination Combivir (zidovudine/AZT + lamivudine/3TC). The primary
endpoint of the study was the proportion of people with HIV levels
below 50 copies/mL after 48 weeks. They also looked at changes
in CD4 counts. A total of 85% of the participants were male, and
the average CD4 count at the start of the study was 64 for the
Kaletra group and 52 for Sustiva.
After 48 weeks, 70% of people on Sustiva had HIV levels below
50 copies, compared to 54% on Kaletra. Interestingly people taking
Kaletra had slightly larger gains in CD4 counts: 167 cells vs.
157. More people stopped their treatment in the Kaletra group:
34% vs. 27%. There were also greater increases in total cholesterol
(62 vs. 53 mg/DL) and triglycerides (62 vs. 167 mg/DL) in people
taking Kaletra compared to Sustiva.
It’s important to point out that the older, soft gel formulation
of Kaletra was used in this study. Some studies have shown higher
rates of gastrointestinal side effects in people using the soft
gel, compared to the newer hard capsule version. This might explain
part of the differences seen in discontinuations and treatment
failures.
This study is of similar design to the ACTG 5142 study, which
also compared Sustiva to Kaletra as first line treatment. The major
difference is that the people in this study had lower average CD4
counts and more advanced disease.
This study is interesting for several reasons. First, while US
treatment guidelines recommend starting treatment well before it
was started in this study, a growing number of people, both worldwide
and in the US, are being diagnosed with HIV with low CD4 counts.
Information on treatment outcomes for this group is particularly
important.
Second, for many years it was commonly believed that boosted protease
inhibitors, like Kaletra, were more potent than NNRTIs. This study
suggests this may not be true.
Lastly, this study confirms the finding
from many other studies that boosted protease inhibitors tend to
lead to larger increases in CD4 cells than NNRTIs.