Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,122,083 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Ten years of HAART.


The year 1996 has brought a sea change in AIDS research and treatment. Three major factors have contributed to this sea change: a new understanding of viral pathogenesis, new and powerful antiretroviral treatment regimens, and new, more powerful tools for managing HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  levels in the blood and elsewhere in the body. Indeed, it was due to the sensitivity of these new viral load assays that researchers were able to determine the kinetics of HIV replication and immune system clearance within the infected human, host, and devise new therapeutic approaches to reduce viral replication. The impact of viral load assays on HIV pathogenesis and treatment research can be compared to the impact of the Hubble Space Telescope Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the first large optical orbiting observatory. Built from 1978 to 1990 at a cost of $1.5 billion, the HST (named for astronomer E. P. Hubble) was expected to provide the clearest view yet obtained of the universe.  on cosmology: both allowed researchers to see their subject with unprecedented resolution.

--Mark Harrington, Viral Load in Vancouver, 1996

Next year will mark a decade since the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy Noun 1. highly active antiretroviral therapy - a combination of protease inhibitors taken with reverse transcriptase inhibitors; used in treating AIDS and HIV
drug cocktail, HAART
 (HAART HAART highly active antiretroviral therapy.
HAART Highly active antiretroviral therapy, triple combination therapy AIDS The concurrent administration of 2 nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors–eg, AZT and 3TC, and a protease
), which ushered in one of the most startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 transformations in the history of medicine.

The Advent of HAART

By late 1995, the AIDS epidemic had been going on for 15 years. Despite years of activism and research, just 4 drugs--all of them nucleoside analogs (AZT AZT or zidovudine (zīdō`vydēn'), drug used to treat patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes AIDS; also called , ddI, ddC, and d4T) had been approved to treat HIV. While AZT and its chemical cousins could delay HIV progression, none of them alone or in 2-drug combinations could durably control HIV, let alone reverse its associated immune suppression and threat of opportunistic diseases. The death toll from AIDS in the United States was approaching 50,000 per year and seemed to be rising.

HIV disease management appeared to be advancing at a snail's pace. Most people living with HIV would progress to AIDS and die, their progression only temporarily halted by 1- or 2-drug nucleoside analog therapy. At best, a cocktail of opportunistic infection (OI) prophylaxis drugs such as Bactrim, fluconazole fluconazole /flu·con·a·zole/ (floo-kon´ah-zol) a triazoleantifungal used in the systemic treatment of candidiasis and cryptococcal meningitis.

flu·con·a·zole
n.
, and azithromycin might be hoped to forestall the development of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP)
A lung infection that affects people with weakened immune systems, such as people with AIDS or people taking medicines that weaken the immune system.

Mentioned in: AIDS, Antiprotozoal Drugs, Sulfonamides
 (PCP PCP
abbr.
1. phencyclidine

2. primary care physician


Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) 
), toxoplasmosis Toxoplasmosis Definition

Toxoplasmosis is an infectious disease caused by the one-celled protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii. Although most individuals do not experience any symptoms, the disease can be very serious, and even fatal, in
, cryptococcal meningitis, and Mycobacterium mycobacterium

Any of the rod-shaped bacteria that make up the genus Mycobacterium. The two most important species cause tuberculosis and leprosy in humans; another species causes tuberculosis in both cattle and humans.
 aviam intracellulare (MAC), while a number of other OIs remained horribly undertreated or untreatable Un`treat´a`ble

a. 1. Incapable of being treated; not practicable.
.

The first reports suggesting that protease inhibitors (PIs) might be different were thought to be drug-company hype. TAG's coverage of the 1995 Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (print-ISSN 0066-4804, CODEN AMACCQ; canceled ISSN 0074-9923, canceled CODEN AACHAX) is an academic journal published by the American Society for Microbiology.  (ICAAC ICAAC Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
ICAAC Iowa Community College Athletic Conference
) conference described a small Abbott study:
   Participants were given AZT/ddC/ritonavir. Their
   CD4s went up by 100 and their plasma RNA went
   down by 2.5 logs at 20 weeks. Over the subsequent
   weeks, he claimed, an increasing proportion of participants
   became viral culture negative--which is to
   say, they could not culture injected cells from the
   blood. "Some became PCR and culture negative,
   which suggests that the viral reservoir was empty."


At the time, we described this as an "irresponsible, unsubstantiated claim" (TAG Does ICAAC, 1995).

The 8 months after November 1995, however, witnessed approval by the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA FDA
abbr.
Food and Drug Administration


FDA,
n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

FDA,
n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
) of 5 new anti-HIV drugs--the nucleoside analog 3TC, 3 new PIs--saquinavir (Invirase), ritonavir ritonavir /ri·to·na·vir/ (ri-to´nah-vir) an HIV protease inhibitor used in treatment of HIV infection and AIDS.

ri·ton·a·vir
n.
 (Norvir), and indinavir indinavir /in·di·na·vir/ (in-di´nah-vir) an HIV protease inhibitor that causes formation of immature, noninfectious viral particles; used as the sulfate salt in the treatment of HIV infection and AIDS.  (Crixivan)--and the non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor Noun 1. non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor - an antiviral drug used against HIV; binds directly to reverse transcriptase and prevents RNA conversion to DNA; often used in combination with other drugs
NNRTI
 (NNRTI NNRTI Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, see there ) nevirapine nevirapine /ne·vir·a·pine/ (ne-vir´ah-pen) a nonnucleoside inhibitor of HIV-1reverse transcriptase, used in combination with other antiretroviral agents in the treatment of HIV infection.  (Viramune). Moreover, that year saw the introduction of new, quantitative viral load assays--such as Roche's RNA RNA: see nucleic acid.
RNA
 in full ribonucleic acid

One of the two main types of nucleic acid (the other being DNA), which functions in cellular protein synthesis in all living cells and replaces DNA as the carrier of genetic
 PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
 and Chiron's branched-chain DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 (bDNA) test--which could reliably measure the amount of HIV in the bloodstream.

Many forces contributed to the HAART revolution. AIDS activism certainly played a part in multiple ways--by demanding faster AIDS research, mobilizing national awareness, and pressuring Congress to increase funds for clinical trials. Basic science on the biology of HIV infection clarified the key role of HIV in depleting CD4 cells. Studies funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH "Not invented here." See digispeak.

NIH - The United States National Institutes of Health.
) demonstrated both the uses and the limitations of available nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs). Drug companies invested in a variety of new treatments for both HIV and its associated infections and cancers. Among the most crucial factors was the role of the FDA in permitting expanded access to experimental AIDS therapies beginning with AZT in 1986, which perhaps most critically provided a framework for accelerated approval of AIDS drugs, beginning with ddI in 1991 and codified cod·i·fy  
tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies
1. To reduce to a code: codify laws.

2. To arrange or systematize.
 in federal regulations in 1992. Accelerated approval allowed drugs to be approved based on favorable changes in surrogate markers such as measurements of CD4 cells and later, viral load. Indeed, ddI was approved in 1991 based on a very small rise in CD4 cells (11 cells over baseline in the ddI group versus a continued decline in those on AZT) in an AIDS Clinical Trials Group The AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) is the largest HIV clinical trials organization in the world, playing a major role in setting standards of care for HIV infection and opportunistic diseases related to HIV and AIDS in the United States and the developed world.  (ACTG ACTG Acting
ACTG AIDS Clinical Trial Group
ACTG Actuating/Actuator
) study, 116B/117, which compared ddI to AZT among AZT-experienced individuals. The clinical benefits of ddI were confirmed in the same study by early 1992. Soon after, ddC was approved in mid-1992 based on similar changes, which did not however confer clinical benefit.

The problem with CD4 cell changes as a surrogate marker was that CD4 cell count was a direct marker of a person's immune status, but only an indirect marker of anti-HIV drug activity (it rose when HIV levels fell). The CD4 cell changes associated with NRTIs were modest and often transient. And the available blood tests for HIV levels in the early 1990s were primitive.

By 1995, however, pivotal papers by groups from the University of Alabama The University of Alabama (also known as Alabama, UA or colloquially as 'Bama) is a public coeducational university located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA. Founded in 1831, UA is the flagship campus of the University of Alabama System.  and the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center is a medical research institution dedicated to finding a cure for HIV/AIDS. It is headed by prominent scientist Dr. David Ho, and located in New York City.  (ADARC ADARC Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center ) showed that ritonavir--a member of a new class of drugs, the PIs, which interfered with a different stage of HIV's life cycle than the NRTIs--could reduce HIV levels in the blood by 2 logs (99%)--as measured by new quantitative HIV RNA tests such as the polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is  (PCR).

While the longer-term benefit of triple-combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) was not yet clear, in the short-term, falling HIV RNA was associated with rising CD4 cells and reductions in incidence of AIDS and death. In Abbott's pivotal ritonavir study, which randomized ran·dom·ize  
tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es
To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment.
 1,090 HIV-infected persons with CD4 counts below 100 cells/mm (3) to ritonavir or placebo over a background of NRTIs, 119 ritonavir recipients developed AIDS or died versus 905 (37.5%) placebo recipients during a median follow-up of just 99 weeks (Cameron 1998). In March 1996, ritonavir became the first AIDS drug since AZT in 1987 to win full approval based on a reduction in mortality. The problem with the approach used in the Abbott study became clear within a few months, however--simply adding a PI into a background of what later would be considered a failing 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  background. Despite the potency of the PI, the emergence of resistance to ritonavir became widespread. Even worse was the fact that HIV resistant to ritonavir was often resistant to indinavir--Merck's equally potent PI--as well.

Nonetheless, the short-term clinical benefit and longer-term promise of the PIs appeared clear. The FDA approved Roche's saquinavir saquinavir /sa·quin·a·vir/ (sah-kwin´ah-vir) an HIV protease inhibitor that causes formation of immature, noninfectious viral particles; used as the base or the mesylate salt in treatment of HIV infection and AIDS.  in December 1995. It was weak and had low bioavailability bioavailability /bio·avail·a·bil·i·ty/ (bi?o-ah-val?ah-bil´i-te) the degree to which a drug or other substance becomes available to the target tissue after administration.

bi·o·a·vail·a·bil·i·ty
n.
 (4%), yet when combined with two NRTIs (AZT and ddC, again) was clearly superior to AZT+ddC on their own. Perhaps more important for AIDS treatment in the long run was FDA's approval of lamivudine (Epivir, 3TC) in November 1995. Because of its low toxicity, good pharmacokinetics (eventually being approved for once-daily use) and the Pact that 3TC-resistant HIV was less fit and mutated more slowly than wild-type HIV, 3TC eventually became the most commonly used drug in HIV combination therapy.

When FDA Commissioner David Kessler--an appointee of the first President Bush who stayed in office until the mid-Clinton years--heard about the favorable results of the Abbott study (due to Abbott's FDA filing for full approval), he asked Merck to submit its PI, indinavir, to the FDA for accelerated approval at the same time. Both drugs were approved in March 1996. Each was a very potent drug with significant drawbacks. Ritonavir, taken at the full close of 600 mg twice daily, had high gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity, while indinavir had to be taken thrice daily on an empty stomach, requiring people to undergo 3-hour, food-free windows each day, while downing liters of water to prevent the development of kidney stones (nephrolithiasis).

By the time of the 11th International Conference on AIDS, held July 8-11, 1996 in Vancouver, British Columbia, researchers from a variety of groups--the ADARC, Boehringer Ingelheim, Merck, and Abbott--showed that various 3-drug antiretroviral combinations--AZT and 3TC plus ritonavir or nelfinavir nelfinavir /nel·fin·a·vir/ (nel-fin´ah-vir) an HIV protease inhibitor that causes formation of immature, noninfectious viral particles; used as the mesylate salt in the treatment of HIV infection.  (Viracept), AZT and ddI plus nevirapine, or even ritonavir plus saquinavir without any reverse transcriptase inhibitors--could reduce HIV levels in the bloodstream by over 99% to below limits of detection (ranging from less than 500 to less than 25 HIV copies per milliliter milliliter /mil·li·li·ter/ (mL) (-le?ter) one thousandth (10-3) of a liter.

mil·li·li·ter
n. Abbr.
 of blood)--in a substantial majority (70% to 100%) of those treated. The studies, while small and short-term, demonstrated that dramatic reductions in viral load could be seen among individuals with either acute or chronic HIV infection, among antiretroviral-naive people, and even among those who had been exposed to prior therapy. In Vanconver, John Mellors from the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) presented the famous study demonstrating that viral load in chronic infection predicts rate of progression to AIDS (Mellors 1996), and David Ho and Marty Markowitz presented their famous eradication hypothesis, suggesting that if HIV levels in the peripheral blood could be suppressed by combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) for several years, residual amounts of integrated HIV provirus provirus /pro·vi·rus/ (pro-vi´rus) the genome of an animal virus integrated (by crossing over) into the chromosome of the host cell, and thus replicated in all of its daughter cells.  in human cells might eventually be eliminated from the body (Ho 1996, 1998).

At the time, TAG pointed out the unanswered questions:
   The duration of long-term viral suppression
   remains to be determined.... The most potent, tolerable
   regimen(s) for long-term suppression need
   to be determined, and rational sequences ... need
   to be defined. Studies in patients with higher CD4
   levels and relatively low viral load need to compare
   partial versus apparently complete plasma
   RNA suppression as an initial strategy, or immediate
   versus deferred suppression. Simpler, more
   convenient regimens need to be developed to
   enhance compliance, eg with the use of time-release
   drugs which can be taken once daily or less
   often. Studies to optimize long-term compliance
   with complicated, inconvenient regimens need to
   be conducted, covering a range of strategies in a
   diverse set of populations. Interventions which
   may contribute to replenishment of holes in the
   immunologic repertoire ... need to be designed and
   implemented. When and whether people experiencing
   a significant CD4+ T cell rise after combination
   therapy can be removed from opportunistic
   infection (OI) prophylaxis and maintenance needs
   to be addressed. Finally, research needs to be conducted
   to determine the feasibility of treating or
   eradicating HIV disease among infected persons
   in developing nations (TAG, Viral Load in
   Vancouver, 1996).


What is remarkable is that even in the first months of 1996, before anyone really knew how to best use PIs in combination therapy, AIDS deaths began to drop dramatically in the US, as shown in these data from the HIV Outpatient Study:

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]

Common AIDS-related OIs dropped dramatically as well:

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]

As the following data show, the decline in AIDS deaths in the US was dramatic, falling almost 3 fold between 1995 and 1998, and stabilizing thereafter.

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]

Spurred in part by HAART and perhaps even more by the introduction of AZT to prevent mother-to-child transmission (MTCT MTCT Mother to Child Transmission
MTCT Manipulator/Teleoperator Control Technology
MTCT Memphis Through Cairo Terms (barge freight on cargo originating on this stretch of the Mississippi River)
MTCT Modified Truncated Cone Target
), perinatal HIV infection rates declined by over 90% and pediatric AIDS diagnoses went from 952 in 1992 to just 59 in 2003.

Consolidation of the HAART approach

Following the euphoria of Vancouver, with a regrettable but predictable media over-emphasis on the possibility of eradication of HIV with HAART, came the much harder work of developing and disseminating solid, evidence-based guidance for physicians, care providers, people living with HIV, and insurers. This work began in late 1996 when the Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979
Health and Human Services, HHS
 (DHHS DHHS Department of Health & Human Services (US government)
DHHS Dana Hills High School (Dana Point, California)
DHHS Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services
DHHS Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services
) set up not one but 2 panels to develop "Principles of HIV Therapy" and "Guidelines for Antiretroviral Therapy." The first panel was set up by NIH's Office of AIDS Research, the second by the Office of HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome  Programs (OHAP OHAP Office of HIV/AIDS Policy ) in the Department. Their work was published in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) is a weekly epidemiological digest for the United States published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The 5 June 1981 issue of the MMWR published the cases of five men in what turned out to be the first report of AIDS.  (MMWR MMWR Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report Epidemiology A news bulletin published by the CDC, which provides epidemiologic data–eg, statistics on the incidence of AIDS, rabies, rubella, STDs and other communicable diseases, causes of mortality–eg, ) in 1998. The DHHS Guidelines Panel became an ongoing body, meeting by conference call monthly and in person annually at the Retrovirus retrovirus, type of RNA virus that, unlike other RNA viruses, reproduces by transcribing itself into DNA. An enzyme called reverse transcriptase allows a retrovirus's RNA to act as the template for this RNA-to-DNA transcription.  Conference. The Guidelines were updated frequently and sometimes significantly.

At the time, no one knew the duration of ART-induced viral suppression, how complete immune reconstitution might be, or whether there would be long-term side effects, and if so, what they would be.

By the late 1990s, however, reports began emerging, first in a trickle, then in a flood, of new and apparently horrible side effects associated with antiretroviral therapy. These ranged from so-called "Crix-belly" to "buffalo hump" to facial lipoatrophy/visceral fat accumulation/peripheral fat wasting ("lipodystrophy"), to a complex of possibly mitochondrial-DNA-dysfunction-associated effects such as lactic acidosis and hepatosplenomegaly to--also seen before HAART--peripheral neuropathy and myopathy myopathy /my·op·a·thy/ (mi-op´ah-the) any disease of muscle.myopath´ic

centronuclear myopathy  myotubular m.
. It was initially unclear and, in some cases still, is less than completely understood to what extent these side effects were related to individual drugs versus drug classes. Certainly, however, in combination with the increasing evidence that HAART could sometimes reverse (and not just delay) the progression of HIV-related immune suppression, the pendulum began to swing from "hit early, hit hard" to "hit HIV-1 hard, but only when necessary" (Harrington & Carpenter 2000).

Many clinicians were still taken with the "hit early" approach, but in the absence of controlled clinical trials defining the optimal point at which to start therapy, and the emergence of data from several large cohort studies including the British Columbia cohort, the EuroSIDA cohort, and the CASCADE collaboration, it appeared that the benefits of HAART were clearest when started before CD4 counts dropped below 200 cells/[mm.sup.3]. However, the benefits of beginning at various CD4 strata above that level were less clear. Greater knowledge about toxicity and the importance of life-long adherence also promoted a change in the starting strategy. The DHHS Guidelines Panel changed its recommendations on "When to start" in 2002, and by 2005 they were rather more conservative:
When to start?--2005

AIDS-defining   Any CD4       Any viral load
illness

Asymptomatic    CD4<200       Any viral load

Asymptomatic    CD4>200<350   Any viral load

Asymptomatic    CD4>350       >100,000

Asymptomatic    CD4>350       <100,000

AIDS-defining   Treat
illness

Asymptomatic    Treat

Asymptomatic    Treatment should be offered
                following full discussion of
                pros and cons with each patient

Asymptomatic    Deferring treatment
                is recommended

Asymptomatic    Defer therapy

--aidsinfo.nih.gov/guidelines/adult/AA_040705.pdf, Table 4


The debate about whether to continue recommending use of 2 NRTIs without a potent PI backbone was more or less ended when the results of ACTG 320 were announced in early 1997. The study showed that among 1,156 HIV-infected persons with fewer than 200 CD4 cells, the combination of AZT with 3TC and indinavir reduced the incidence of AIDS and death by 50% compared with those taking AZT with 3TC alone. The study provided clear evidence that the HAART approach prolonged health and life in this population, and that its benefits were associated with sustained viral suppression and increases in CD4 counts, often to above 200.

Later evidence came from multiple studies showing that among persons whose CD4 counts rose above 200 cells/[mm.sup.3], it was safe to stop taking prophylaxis and even maintenance therapy for Pneumocystis carinii (now Pneumocystis Pneumocystis /Pneu·mo·cys·tis/ (-sis´tis) a genus of yeastlike fungi. P. cari´nii is the causative agent of interstitial plasma cell pneumonia.

pneu·mo·cys·tis
n.
 jiroveci) pneumonia (PCP), toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus cytomegalovirus (sī'təmĕg'əlōvī`rəs), member of the herpesvirus family that can cause serious complications in persons with weakened immune systems.  (CMV) retinitis retinitis /ret·i·ni·tis/ (ret?i-ni´tis) inflammation of the retina.

retinitis circina´ta , circinate retinitis circinate retinopathy.
, fungal infections, and MAC. Thus, there was clinical evidence that HAART could in Pact restore holes in the immune repertoire, even if not always completely.

Major additions to the drug armamentarium ar·ma·men·tar·i·um
n. pl. ar·ma·men·tar·i·ums or ar·ma·men·tar·i·a
The complete equipment of a physician or medical institution, including drugs, books, supplies, and instruments.
 came in 1998 with efavirenz efavirenz /ef·a·vi·renz/ (ef´ah-vi?renz) an antiretroviral, inhibiting reverse transcriptase; used in the treatment of HIV infection.

e·fa·vir·enz
n.
 (Sustiva), in 2000 with lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra), in 2001 with tenofovir DF (Viread), and--arguably--in 2003 with enfuvirtide (Fuzeon, T-20), the first fusion inhibitor, and with atazanavir (Reyataz). Efavirenz catapulted the NNRTI class to first-line therapy along with the PIs; its sponsor, Dupont, boldly compared efavirenz to the gold-standard PI, indinavir, in its pivotal study Dupont 006, which demonstrated that efavirenz was as potent as indinavir while being less toxic and, at once rather than 3 times daily, easier to take as well. Lopinavir/ritonavir also emerged as a new first-line drug after proving to have greater potency, better pharmacokinetics, and a higher barrier to resistance than other PIs. Tenofovir had the benefits of a long half-life and apparently reduced toxicity compared with other NRTIs. T-20 was a breakthrough drug from a scientific perspective, but its clinical use was limited by being a twice-daily injectable, with painful injection site reactions. And although BMS's atazanavir reduced cholesterol levels compared with other PIs, and could be taken once daily, its potency was inferior unless combined with ritonavir, which mitigated its cholesterol benefits for some, while increasing its potency overall.

Regimen simplification came with the introduction of fixed-dose combinations including Com- bivir (AZT+3TC, 1997), Trizivir (AZT+3TC+ ABC ABC
 in full American Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928.
, 2000), Epzicom (ABC+3TC, 2003), and Truvada (FTC FTC

See Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
+TDF (language) TDF - An intermediate language, a close relative of ANDF. A TDF program is an ASCII stream describing an abstract syntax tree.

TDF became part of TenDRA in abut 2001.
, 2003); however, these advances were blunted to some extent by their being--in Joep Lange's words--"incestuous in·ces·tu·ous
adj.
1. Of, involving, or suggestive of incest.

2. Having committed incest.
 combinations" developed because they had the same manufacturer, rather than because they made intrinsic therapeutic sense.

By 2005, results from several long-term studies indicated clear favorites among the NNRTI and PI classes for initial therapy, along with better NRTI backbone regimens. With this amount of choice in first-line regimens, it is perhaps not a surprise that there is less clarity with respect to second-line and salvage therapy regimens. Most treatment switching currently occurs because of side effects and involves changing one drug within a regimen or simplifying regimens. For instance, changing to a once-daily regimen to simplify the regimen, rather than for virologic failure or the emergence of drug resistance.

The use of resistance testing is another novelty which interceded over the past 5 years; however its benefits in clinical practice as compared with the intelligent use of treatment history guided by expert opinion have yet to be clearly demonstrated in clinical trials.

Feasibility of HIV eradication

Starting in 1997, a number of research teams from Baltimore, San Diego, and elsewhere demonstrated that despite HAART's potent effects in limiting HIV replication, slowing the emergence of drug resistance and supporting immune reconstitution, the impact on integrated proviral DNA that existed in more than 100,000 resting but infected CD4 cells was negligible, and would not lead to viral eradication within a normal human lifespan. Drastic therapeutic techniques such as whole body T cell ablation "therapy" followed by immune cell transplants (carried out in an understandably small number of patients) failed to yield anything to justify their toxicity. The possibility of HIV eradication awaits a breakthrough in our understanding of HIV pathogenesis and immune therapy.

Future therapy for HIV

The best new drugs to emerge since 1996 are all members of the first 3 established drug classes, the NRTIs, NNRTIs, and PIs. However the best new drugs to emerge in the coming decade are likely to be members of new drug classes such as the several entry inhibitors (EIs)--CCR5 (R5), CXCR CXCR Chemokine, CXC Motif, Receptor
CXCR Alpha Chemokine Receptor
4 (X4), gp120, and fusion inhibitors--and possibly even newer approaches such as integrase, budding, and maturation inhibitors. The coreceptor blockers--R5 and X4 antagonists--must surmount fears of their effects on HIV tropism and demonstrate lack of significant toxicity. In addition, the introduction of either an R5 or an X4 antagonist might require the addition of an expensive new diagnostic test--the viral tropism assay that currently costs over $1,000--to the standard of care. As the experience of the past decade shows, adding a new test--such as viral load, resistance, or even therapeutic drug monitoring therapeutic drug monitoring Clinical pharmacology The regular measurement of serum levels of drugs requiring close 'titration' of doses in order to ensure that there are sufficient levels in the blood to be therapeutically effective, while avoiding potentially  (TDM (Time Division Multiplexing) A technology that transmits multiple signals simultaneously over a single transmission path. Each lower-speed signal is time sliced into one high-speed transmission. )--is expensive, time-consuming, and beset by difficulty, particularly if the additional clinical benefit attributable to the test is difficult to demonstrate as in the case of resistance testing or controversial as with TDM, widely used in Europe but not in the United States.

Ultimately, lifelong combination chemotherapy for HIV is far from ideal. As yet unproved are approaches to strengthen the immune system by using cytokines such as interleukin-2 (IL-2) or interleukin-7, therapeutic vaccines (which are beset by the same problems afflicting preventive HIV vaccine research), or other therapeutic strategies such as intermittent therapy (which might reduce total drug exposure while preserving drug benefit).

HIV research is well tunded and the new antiretroviral pipeline is fairly robust--TAG's antiretroviral drug pipeline chart, available online at aidsinfonyc.org/tag/tx/pipeline2005.html, shows up to 20 drugs currently in clinical trials that may make it to FDA review within the next few years, with many more in pre-clinical stages of development. However, as the long saga of AIDS research to this date indicates, the most promising approaches will come from new insights derived from basic science. Unfortunately, the next few years do not look as promising as the last decade for AIDS research. Funding at the NIH, the engine of global funding for HIV research, will be climbing by just 2% next year, compared with the more than 100% increases registered since 1992. More AIDS funds will go to vaccine research, which is an urgent priority, but less likely to result in immediate breakthroughs. Industry investment, while still healthy, depends on a robust basic science base whose future is no longer guaranteed. Finally, the US and global healthcare systems are in a state of flux Noun 1. state of flux - a state of uncertainty about what should be done (usually following some important event) preceding the establishment of a new direction of action; "the flux following the death of the emperor"
flux
, far from ideal, and deeply unjust for many here and most internationally. And the task of providing treatment to those who need it worldwide, and keeping them on therapy for decades to come, has only just begun.

When to start ART--1998

Reflecting the exuberance of Vancouver, the initial recommendations for when to start ART were:

--Any symptomatic HIV infection (AIDS, thrush, unexplained lever), regardless of CD4 count and viral load

--Asymptomatic with CD4 count < 500 cells/[mm.sup.3] or HIV RNA > 10,000 (bDNA) or >20,000 (RT-PCR RT-PCR

reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. See PCR1.
) copies/mL-"Treatment should be offered. Strength of recommendation is based on prognosis for disease-free survival."

--Asymptomatic with CD4 count > 500 cells/[mm.sup.3] and HIV < 10,000 (bDNA) or <20,000 (RT-PCR) copies/mL

--Guidelines for the Use of Antiretroviral Agents in HIV-Infected Adults & Adolescents, MMWR 47/RR-5, 24 April 1998

References

Cameron DW, Heath-Chiozzi M, Danner S, et al. Randomised Adj. 1. randomised - set up or distributed in a deliberately random way
randomized

irregular - contrary to rule or accepted order or general practice; "irregular hiring practices"
 placebo-controlled trial of ritonavir in advanced HIV-1 disease. The Advanced HIV Disease Ritonavir Group. Lancet. 1998;351 (9102):536-7.

Centers for Disease Control (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
). HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 15, cdc.gov/hiv/stats/2003SurveillanceReport.htm.

Harrington M, Marco M, Cox S, Horn T. TAG Does ICAAC. AIDS research highlights from the 35th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC), San Francisco, California “San Francisco” redirects here. For other uses, see San Francisco (disambiguation).

The City and County of San Francisco (EN IPA: [sænfrənˈsɪskoʊ] 
, September 17-20, 1995. Treatment Action Group, New York, 1995.

Harrington M. Viral Load in Vancouver: A Report from the 11th International Conference on AIDS, Vancouver, British Columbia, July 8-11, 1996. Treatment Action Group, New York, 1996.

Harrington M, Carpenter CCJ See citizen journalism. . Hit HIV-1 hard, but only when necessary. Lancet. 2000;355:2147-52.

Ho DD. Viral counts count in HIV infection. Science. 1996;272:1124-5.

Ho DD. Toward HIV eradication or remission: the tasks ahead. Science. 1998;280(5371):1866-7.

Mellors JW, Rinaldo CR, Gupta P, White RM, Todd JA, Kingsley LA. Prognosis in HIV-1 infection predicted by the quantity of virus in plasma. Science. 1996;272:1167-70.

Palella FJ, Delaney KM, Moorman AC, et al. Declining morbidity and mortality Morbidity and Mortality can refer to:
  • Morbidity & Mortality, a term used in medicine
  • Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a medical publication
See also
  • Morbidity, a medical term
  • Mortality, a medical term
 among patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus human immunodeficiency virus
n.
HIV.


Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
A transmissible retrovirus that causes AIDS in humans.
 inflection. N Eng J Med. 1998;338(13):853-860.

Mark Harrington is a founder and Executive Director of Treatment Action Group (TAG) in New York (aidsinfonyc.org/tag). He was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1997.
FDA atnitretroviral approval dates

Drug                  Brand name      Sponsor

AZT (zidovudine)      Retrovir        Burroughs-Wellcome
                                      (now GlaxoSmithKline)

ddI (didanosine)      Videx           Bristol-Myers
                                      (now Bristol-Myers Squibb)

ddC (zalcitabine)     Hivid           Hoffmann-LaRoche

d4T (stavudine)       Zerit           Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS)

3TC (lamivudine)      Epivir          GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)

saquinavir (SQV)      Invirase        Hoffmann-LaRoche

ritonavir (RTV)       Norvir          Abbott

indinavir (IDV)       Crixivan        Merck

nevirapine (NVP)      Viramune        Boehringer Ingelheim

nelfinavir (NFV)      Viracept        Agouron (now Pfizer)

delavirdine (DLV)     Rescriptor      Pharmacia & Upjohn
                                      (now Pfizer)

AZT/3TC               Combivir        GSK

saquinavir sgc *      Fortovase *     Hoffmann-LaRoche

efavirenz (EFV)       Sustiva         DuPont (now BMS)

abacavir (ABC)        Ziagen          GSK

amprenavir (APV)      Agenerase       GSK

lopinavir (LPV)/
ritonavir             Kaletra         Abbott

ddI enteric coated    Videx EC        BMS

AZT/3TC/ABC           Trizivir        GSK

tenofovir DF (TDF)    Viread          Gilead

enfuvirtide (T-20)    Fuzeon          Hoffmann-LaRoche/Trimeris

atazanavir (ATV)      Reyataz         BMS

FTC (emtricitabine)   Emtriva         Gilead

ABC/3TC               Epzicom         GSK

FTC/TDF               Truvada         Gilead

fosamprenavir         Lexiva          GSK

ddI delayed release
(generic)             --              Barr Laboratories

tipranavir (TPV)      Aptivus         Boehringer Ingelheim

Drug                  Approval date   Class

AZT (zidovudine)      19 Mar 1987     NRTI

ddI (didanosine)      9 Oct 1991      NRTI

ddC (zalcitabine)     19 Jun 1992     NRTI

d4T (stavudine)       24 Jun 1994     NRTI

3TC (lamivudine)      17 Nov 1995     NRTI

saquinavir (SQV)      6 Dec 1995      PI

ritonavir (RTV)       1 Mar 1996      PI

indinavir (IDV)       13 Mar 1996     PI

nevirapine (NVP)      21 Jun 1996     NNRTI

nelfinavir (NFV)      14 Mar 1997     PI

delavirdine (DLV)     4 Apr 1997      NNRTI

AZT/3TC               27 Sep 1997     NRTI

saquinavir sgc *      7 Nov 1997      PI

efavirenz (EFV)       17 Sep 1998     NNRTI

abacavir (ABC)        17 Dec 1998     NRTI

amprenavir (APV)      15 Apr 1999     PI

lopinavir (LPV)/
ritonavir             15 Sep 2000     PI

ddI enteric coated    31 Oct 2000     NRTI

AZT/3TC/ABC           14 Nov 2000     NRTI

tenofovir DF (TDF)    26 Oct 2001     NRTI

enfuvirtide (T-20)    13 Mar 2003     EI

atazanavir (ATV)      20 Jun 2003     PI

FTC (emtricitabine)   2 Jul 2003      NRTI

ABC/3TC               2 Aug 2003      NRTI

FTC/TDF               2 Aug 2003      NRTI

fosamprenavir         20 Oct 2003     PI

ddI delayed release
(generic)             3 Dec 2004      NRTI

tipranavir (TPV)      22 Jun 2005     PI

* soft gel capsule saquinavir (Fortovase) will
be discontinued by Roche by February 15, 2006.

What to start?--1998

Recommended ARV agents for treatment of established HIV infection

Preferred: Strong evidence o1 clinical benefit and/or sustained
suppression of plasma viral load: One choice from column A and
column B. Drugs listed in random, not priority, order:

Column A                               Column B

Indinavir                              AZT + ddI
Nelfinavir                             d4T + ddI
Ritonaviv                              AZT + ddC
Saquinavir SGC*                        AZT + 3TC
Ritonavir + Saquinavir SGC* or HGC*    d4T + 3TC

Alternative: Less liked to provide sustained virus suppression

1 NNRTI (Nevirapine) and 2 NRTIs (column B, above)
Saquinavir HGC* + 2 NRTIs

Not generally recommended: 2 NRTIs

Not recommended: All monotherapies
                d4T + ddI
                ddC + ddI
                ddC + d4T
                ddC + 3TC

* SGC denotes soft-gel capsule
(Fortovase) and HGC denotes
hard-gel capsule (Invirase).

What to start?--2005

Preferred regimens

NNRTI-based            Efavirenz + (3TC or FTC) + (AZT or TDF)
PI-based               Lopinavir/ritonavir + (3TC or FTC) + AZT

Alternative Regimens

NNRTI-based            Efavirenz + (3TC or FTC) + (ABC or ddI or d4T)
                       Nevirapine + (3TC or FTC) + (AZT or d4T or ddI
                       or ABC or TDF)*
                       * but NVP not recommended in women with CD4>250
                       or men>400

PI-based               Atazanavir + (3TC or FTC) + (AZT or d4T or ABC
                       or TDF or ddI)
                       Fosamprenavir          + "   + "
                       Indinavir/ritonavir    + "   + "
                       Lopinavir/ritonavir    + "   + "
                       Nelfinavir             + "   + "
                       Saquitaavir/ritonavir  + "   + "

3 NRTI based           ABC + AZT + 3TC only when a preferred or an
                       alternative NNRTI-based or a PI-based regimen
                       cannot or should not be used

Decline in Pediatric AIDS Diagnoses, US, 1992-2003

Year of Diagnosis   Number of Cases
1992                      952
1993                      926
1994                      826
1995                      688
1996                      522
1997                      335
1998                      246
1999                      187
2000                      117
2001                      119
2002                      105
2003                      59

Estimated numbers of AIDS cases in children
<13 years of age, by year of diagnosis,
1992-2003--United States--Cases of HIV
infection and AIDS in the United States, 2003
(HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, Vol. 15)
(cdd.gov/hiv/stats/2003SurveillanceReport.htm)

Note: Table made from bar graph.
COPYRIGHT 2005 The Center for AIDS: Hope & Remembrance Project
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Overview
Author:Harrington, Mark
Publication:Research Initiative/Treatment Action!
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:4496
Previous Article:HAART at 10--a CFA timeline.
Next Article:HIV/AIDS research after HAART.
Topics:



Related Articles
Treatment for HIV and Aids to become a reality.
AIDS-related lymphoma (ARL) presenting as cauda equina syndrome.
MED-15. Management of fluconazole resistant candidal esophagitis in an HIV-infected patient.
Immunology study finds decreased activation markers related to better viral control.
HIV/AIDS research after HAART.
Therapeutic and diagnostic advances in the HAART era.
Reversible right ventricular dysfunction in HIV-infected patients.
Women & HIV.
Care for HIV infection in the US: can we do better?
The potential of behavior-change interventions to improve the HIV/AIDS survivorship experience: the example of smoking cessation.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles