Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine (Mar 2012)

Why it’s time to say goodbye to stavudine ... everywhere

  • Isabelle Andrieux-Meyer,
  • Polly Clayden,
  • Simon Collins,
  • Nathan Geffen,
  • Eric Goemaere,
  • Mark Harrington,
  • Sharonann Lynch,
  • Tido von Schoen-Angerer,
  • Tracy Swan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/sajhivmed.v13i1.155
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 17 – 19

Abstract

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The previous issue of the SAJHIV (December 2011) carried an Opinion piece by Innes, Cotton and Venter regarding the potential value of low-dose of stavudine (20 mg twice a day). They suggested that reduced dosing of stavudine may lead to levels of viral suppression comparable with those achieved with stavudine 30 mg bd but with a lower risk of toxicity and side-effects, and at a fraction of the cost of tenofovir. The Opinion was related to a larger proposal, led by Venter, to conduct a head-to-head trial comparing low-dose stavudine with tenofovir (both in a regimen including lamivudine and efavirenz) on viral suppression and other treatment outcomes over 24 months. There has been considerable debate regarding the advantages and disadvantages of low-dose stavudine, and in turn the value of any such trial. Here the debate continues with a commentary by Isabelle Andrieux-Meyer et al. and a rebuttal by Venter and colleagues.