Lessons from two "triple nuke" failures (new training module).Last year two three-drug regimens that had once seemed reasonable (tenofovir tenofovir /te·no·fo·vir/ (te-no´fo-vir?) an antiretroviral agent that inhibits reverse transcriptase; used as t. disoproxil fumarate in the treatment of HIV-1 (human immunodeficiency virus-1) infection. + 3TC + abacavir; also tenofovir + 3TC +ddI) were found to work very badly; these combinations must never be used alone as antiretroviral antiretroviral /an·ti·ret·ro·vi·ral/ (-ret´ro-vi?ral) effective against retroviruses, or an agent with this quality. an·ti·ret·ro·vi·ral adj. treatment, because they fail in most patients and cause serious drug resistance. There were different theories of why these three-drug regimens failed, but now it is widely believed that the main problem is that they did not provide a high enough genetic barrier to the development of two viral Meaning "related or caused by a virus," with regard to computers and information technology, the term refers less to a computer virus than it does to information that spreads quickly via the Internet. See viral marketing and viral video. mutations, K65R and M184V, which led to resistance to the drugs. (The picture is different for the four-drug combination AZT AZT or zidovudine (zīdō`vy dēn'), drug used to treat patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes AIDS; also called + 3TC + abacavir + tenofovir, which is showing good results even though it contains one of the problematic combinations within it. The AZT helps prevent the K65R and M184V resistance pattern from developing.) On March 31 Clinical Care Options published a half-hour training module for physicians (but available to anyone) explaining this situation, and what has been learned from it. This module, titled "Lessons Learned: The Perils of Extrapolation--Combination NRTI Noun 1. NRTI - an antiviral drug used against HIV; is incorporated into the DNA of the virus and stops the building process; results in incomplete DNA that cannot create a new virus; often used in combination with other drugs Use" will be available for one year at: http://www.clinicaloptions.com/hiv Under "Treatment Update," click "Lessons Learned." Note: free one-time registration is required to use this site. |
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