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AIDS:
POST AUTHOR CORRECTIONS, 15 October 2009
doi: 10.1097/QAD.0b013e328331d2ab
Article: PDF Only

Rosuvastatin versus pravastatin in dyslipidemic HIV-1-infected patients receiving protease inhibitors: a randomized trial

Aslangul, Elisabeth; Assoumou, Lambert; Bittar, Randa; Valantin, Marc-Antoine; Kalmykova, Olga; Peytavin, Gilles; Fiévet, Marie-Hélène; Boccara, Franck; Bonnefont-Rousselot, Dominique; Melchior, Jean-Claude; Giral, Philippe; Costagliola, Dominique

Published Ahead-of-Print
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Abstract

Background: HIV infection and its treatment with protease inhibitors, especially when boosted with ritonavir, can cause lipid disorders. Statins, with the exception of fluvastatin, pravastatin and rosuvastatin, interact with protease inhibitor metabolism via CYP450. Pravastatin is recommended for patients with protease inhibitor-associated dyslipidemia. Rosuvastatin is the statin most effective on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-c) in non-HIV patients.

Methods: HIV-1-infected patients treated with boosted protease inhibitor were randomized to receive either rosuvastatin 10 mg/day or pravastatin 40 mg/day for dyslipidemia (LDL-c >4.1 mmol/l and triglycerides <8.8 mmol/l). The percentage change in LDL-c, triglyceride and high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels, measured in a central laboratory, was determined after 45 days of statin treatment.

Results: Eighty-eight patients were randomized and 83 took the study drugs, 41 rosuvastatin and 42 pravastatin. The median duration of prior antiretroviral treatment was 9 years. At baseline, the median LDL-c level was 4.93 mmol/l, the triglyceride level 2.29 mmol/l, and the high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol level 1.27 mmol/l. The median percentage changes in the rosuvastatin and pravastatin arms were -37 and -19% for LDL-c (P < 0.001), respectively, and -19 and -7% for triglycerides (P = 0.035), respectively. The change in the high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol level was not significantly different between the two arms. None of the four severe adverse events was attributed to the statins; in particular, there were no renal, hepatic or muscular events.

Conclusion: Rosuvastatin 10 mg/day was more effective than pravastatin 40 mg/day on LDL-c and triglyceride levels in HIV-1-infected patients receiving a boosted protease inhibitor.

(C) 2009 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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