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JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes:
April 2009 - Volume 50 - Issue 4 - pp 390-396
doi: 10.1097/QAI.0b013e318198a0cc
Clinical Science

Safety of Switching Nevirapine Twice Daily to Nevirapine Once Daily in Virologically Suppressed Patients

Podzamczer, Daniel MD; Olmo, Montserrat MD; Sanz, Jose MD; Boix, Vicente MD; Negredo, Eugenia MD; Knobel, Hernando MD; Domingo, Pere MD; Pineda, Juan A MD; Vilades, Consuelo MD; Quero, Jose Hernandez MD; Force, Lluis MD; Lahoz, Juan Gonzalez MD; Muñoz, Pepa MD; Llibre, Josep M MD; Mariño, Ana MD; Ortega, Enrique MD; Dalmau, David MD; Gatell, Josep M MD; Antón, Esperanza MD; Sola, Julio MD; Galindo, María J MD; Pedrol, Enric MD; Sanz, Jesus MD; Lima, Javier Torre de MD; Flores, Juan MD; and the NODy Study Group

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Abstract

Background: The strategy of switching nevirapine (NVP) twice daily to once daily was evaluated.

Methods: Forty-eight-week randomized, open, multicenter trial. Stable HIV-infected patients on NVP twice daily for >12-18 weeks with alanine aminotransferase (ALT) <2.5, the upper normal limit were randomized to continue their regimen or switch to NVP 400 mg once daily. Primary end point was the proportion of ALT/aspartate transaminase (AST) ≥grade 3.

Results: Two hundred eighty-nine patients were included, mean CD4 620 cells per microliter. Noninferiority was demonstrated in the per protocol analysis, with 97.9% (once daily) and 99.3% (twice daily) of patients event free (difference, 1.4%; 95% confidence interval, -1.95% to 5.4%), whereas 81.8% vs. 93.8% were event free by intent-to-treat switch = toxicity analysis (difference, 12%; 95% confidence interval, 4.6% to 19.4%). Only 4 patients (3 once daily, 1 twice daily) had NVP-related grade 3/4 ALT/AST increases, but in 2 of them (once daily), transaminases decreased despite continuation with NVP. Two other once daily patients presented grade 3/4 ALT/AST increase due to well-documented acute hepatitis A virus or hepatitis C virus infection. Grade 2 ALT/AST increases occurred in 11.2% (once daily) vs. 10.3% (twice daily) of patients (P = 0.80). A larger number of once daily patients were lost to follow-up/violated protocol (15% vs. 5%).

Conclusions: In patients on standard twice daily NVP-containing regimens for at least 12-18 weeks, per protocol analysis showed that switching to once daily NVP was not inferior to continued twice daily NVP in terms of the predefined noninferiority margin of 10% for hepatotoxicity.

© 2009 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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