HIV/AIDS: Research and Palliative Care (Jan 2012)

Review of the safety, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics of elvitegravir with an emphasis on resource-limited settings

  • Lee JSF,
  • Calmy A,
  • Andrieux-Meyer I,
  • Ford N

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2012, no. default
pp. 5 – 15

Abstract

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Janice Soo Fern Lee1, Alexandra Calmy1,2, Isabelle Andrieux-Meyer1, Nathan Ford1,31Médecins Sans Frontières, 2HIV/AIDS Unit, Infectious Disease Service, Geneva University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland; 3Centre for Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Research, University of Cape Town, South AfricaAbstract: Integrase inhibitors represent an important new class of antiretroviral drugs. Elvitegravir, the second available integrase inhibitor to be submitted for regulatory approval appears to be a promising once-daily agent when combined with other antiretroviral drugs. Elvitegravir has demonstrated good efficacy and safety, with minimal side effects and no specific requirements in terms of laboratory monitoring. In addition, elvitegravir is available as a fixed-dose combination. However, the drug requires boosting and this leads to a number of drug–drug interactions and necessary dose adjustment when dosing with certain drugs, including dose reduction in the presence of atazanavir, lopinavir, rifabutin, and ketoconazole, and dose increase for ethinyl estradiol when co-administered with boosted elvitegravir. The main advantage of elvitegravir lies in its potential to be administered as a once-daily, single pill. Limitations include dose adjustment requirements, a relatively low genetic barrier to resistance, high price, and lack of data for use in children. Clinical trials addressing specific challenges encountered in resources-limited settings should be encouraged.Keywords: elvitegravir, efficacy, safety, resistance, resource-limited settings