Viruses (Jul 2023)

Lipids and Transaminase in Antiretroviral-Treatment-Experienced People Living with HIV, Switching to a Doravirine-Based vs. a Rilpivirine-Based Regimen: Data from a Real-Life Setting

  • Paolo Maggi,
  • Elena Delfina Ricci,
  • Canio Vito Martinelli,
  • Giuseppe Vittorio De Socio,
  • Nicola Squillace,
  • Chiara Molteni,
  • Addolorata Masiello,
  • Giancarlo Orofino,
  • Barbara Menzaghi,
  • Rita Bellagamba,
  • Francesca Vichi,
  • Benedetto Maurizio Celesia,
  • Giordano Madeddu,
  • Giovanni Francesco Pellicanò,
  • Maria Aurora Carleo,
  • Antonio Cascio,
  • Andrea Parisini,
  • Lucia Taramasso,
  • Laura Valsecchi,
  • Leonardo Calza,
  • Stefano Rusconi,
  • Eleonora Sarchi,
  • Salvatore Martini,
  • Olivia Bargiacchi,
  • Katia Falasca,
  • Giovanni Cenderello,
  • Sergio Ferrara,
  • Antonio Di Biagio,
  • Paolo Bonfanti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v15071612
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 7
p. 1612

Abstract

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Doravirine (DOR) is a newly approved non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI). We aimed to investigate, in a real-life setting, how switching to a DOR-based regimen rather than a rilpivirine (RPV)-based regimen impacted metabolic and hepatic safety. The analysis included 551 antiretroviral treatment (ART)-experienced people living with HIV (PLWH), starting RPV-based or DOR-based regimens with viral load p p = 0.25) (comparison p = 0.39). Similar trends were observed when excluding the PLWH on lipid-lowering treatment from the analysis. People with normal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels showed a slight ALT increase in both cohorts, and those with baseline ALT > 40 IU/L experienced a significant decline (−14 IU/L, p = 0.008) only in the DOR cohort. Lipid profile improved in both cohorts, and there was a significant reduction in ALT in PLWH with higher-than-normal baseline levels on DOR-based ART.

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