Switching from abacavir/lamivudine plus nevirapine to abacavir/lamivudine/dolutegravir in virologically controlled HIV-infected adults (SWAD study)

2018 
Abstract Introduction The metabolic pathways of dolutegravir suggest a potential predator effect of nevirapine on dolutegravir pharmacokinetics and switching from a nevirapine- to a dolutegravir-containing regimen could lead to a lower and suboptimal exposure to dolutegravir several weeks after the switch in case of persistent inducer effect. Patients and method Prospective, pilot, single-arm, open-label, non-comparative, bicentric study to evaluate the pharmacokinetics, virologic outcomes, safety, and patient satisfaction of switching from abacavir/lamivudine and nevirapine to a single tablet of abacavir/lamivudine/dolutegravir. The primary endpoint was the maintenance of virologic suppression (HIV-1 RNA  Results Dolutegravir reached steady state by week 4/week 12 when expected by day 5/day 10. All subjects maintained plasma HIV-RNA ˂ 50 copies/mL at week 12 and week 48. Abacavir/lamivudine/dolutegravir was well-tolerated, with two cases of serious adverse events deemed unrelated to study drugs (coronary syndrome in both cases), and one discontinuation for renal impairment at week 24 with a slight improvement after dolutegravir discontinuation. Level of treatment satisfaction remained high after the switch. Conclusion The transient predator effect of nevirapine on dolutegravir had no clinical consequences after switching from nevirapine to dolutegravir, neither on safety nor maintenance of virologic suppression. It also had no consequences on patient satisfaction.
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