Drug to Block Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission Induces ResistanceJune 02, 2005The incidence of drug resistance associated with single-dose nevirapine, a drug used to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1, may be substantially higher than previously thought and of particular risk for those infected with HIV-1 subtype C, according to three new studies published in the July 1 issue of The Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available online. A single dose of nevirapine given to an HIV-infected pregnant woman during delivery, and another given to her newborn, can cut the rate of mother-to-child HIV transmission in half. The relative simplicity and affordability of single-dose nevirapine have made it the drug of choice for prevention of mother-to-child transmission in many developing countries. This new research expands understanding of the risks of drug resistance associated with single-dose nevirapine, but as noted by all three research groups, the clinical implications for patients are not yet clear. More research will be needed to determine whether nevirapine used to prevent mother-to-child transmission affects the chances of successful treatment later with nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, the class of drug to which nevirapine belongs. Two of the studies analyzed the incidence of nevirapine-associated resistance using laboratory tests more sensitive than standard genotypic assays. In the first, researchers led by Jeffrey A. Johnson, PhD, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, used a new, very sensitive technique to detect resistance mutations in samples of HIV-1 obtained from 50 South African women before and after treatment with single-dose nevirapine. Using a less-sensitive conventional technique called sequence analysis, researchers had previously estimated that viral resistance to nevirapine emerged in approximately 40 percent of women after receiving the single-dose therapy. In contrast, Dr. Johnson and colleagues concluded that resistance emerges in at least 65 percent of women after use of single-dose nevirapine. This finding indicates that more than one-third of the resistance that emerges from this intervention is undetected by conventional laboratory tests. In the second study, a group headed by Susan H. Eshleman, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University, analyzed HIV samples from nine mothers and five infants in Uganda who had received single-dose nevirapine. The researchers used standard sequencing techniques and, like the first group of researchers, two more-sensitive assays. The more-sensitive assays detected resistance mutations a year or more after use of single-dose nevirapine, whereas the conventional assay could not detect resistance at one or two years. Taken together, these two studies indicate that resistance after the single-dose therapy occurs more frequently and may persist longer in the circulation than previously thought. The third study, also led by Dr. Eshleman, asked whether the rate of nevirapine resistance differs according to HIV-1 subtype. The researchers examined the rate of nevirapine resistance after single-dose therapy in 65 women in Malawi infected with subtype C, the most common subtype in many developing countries where single-dose nevirapine is used, as compared with that of 241 women in Uganda infected with subtypes A or D. (In the United States, B is the predominant subtype.) Women in each subtype group had similar demographic characteristics. The frequency of mutations associated with nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors was significantly higher in women with subtype C virus (69 percent) than in those with subtype A (19 percent) or subtype D (36 percent). In an accompanying editorial, Scott M. Hammer, MD, of Columbia University, emphasized that these three studies raise questions for additional research, including whether the presence of nevirapine-associated resistance mutations in women and children compromises the subsequent treatment of their HIV infection, or the subsequent use of single-dose nevirapine in a second pregnancy. As an alternative approach to single-dose nevirapine, Dr. Hammer noted, combination therapies can reduce rates of newborn HIV infection while reducing the risk of resistance in the mother, but are more expensive and may require more health care infrastructure. "As with any new medical intervention," Dr. Hammer said, "there are inevitable tradeoffs with single-dose nevirapine. Although no major safety issues have arisen in mothers or infants taking this therapy, the emergence of drug resistance has created an increasing challenge to the scientific and public health communities." Infectious Diseases Society of America |
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| Related Nevirapine Current Events and Nevirapine News Articles Maternal HIV-1 treatment protects against transmission to newborns Mothers receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) to treat HIV-1 infection are less likely than untreated mothers to transmit the virus to their newborns through breastfeeding. Weighing costs, benefits of HIV treatments Prevention versus treatment? Cost versus efficacy? So go two of the dilemmas looming over Dartmouth's Paul E. Palumbo, M.D., and his fellow researchers in the race to fight HIV and other infectious diseases in the developing world - especially among women and their young children. Prolonged nevirapine in breast-fed babies prevents HIV infection but leads to drug-resistant HIV Babies born to HIV-positive mothers and given the antiretroviral drug nevirapine through the first six weeks of life to prevent infection via breast-feeding are at high risk for developing drug-resistant HIV if they get infected anyway, a team of researchers report. Researchers estimate lives lost due to delay in antiretroviral drug use for HIV/AIDS in South Africa More than 330,000 lives were lost to HIV/AIDS in South Africa from 2000 and 2005 because a feasible and timely antiretroviral (ARV) treatment program was not implemented, assert researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) in a study published online by the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (JAIDS) (http://www.jaids.com/). Efavirenz-Based Initial Therapies Associated with Better Outcomes in HIV-Infected Adults A study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that HIV-infected patients taking the antiretroviral drug efavirenz were more likely to adhere to treatment and less likely to experience virologic failure and death compared to patients taking nevirapine. Certain HIV treatment less effective when used with anti-TB therapy Patients receiving rifampicin-based anti-tuberculosis therapy are more likely to experience virological failure when starting nevirapine-based antiretroviral therapy, an HIV treatment that is widely used in developing countries because of lower cost, than when starting efavirenz-based antiretroviral therapy. Findings offer insights into role of breastfeeding in preventing infant death, HIV infection In many poor countries, mothers with HIV face a stark choice: to nurse their infants, and risk passing on HIV through their breast milk-or to formula feed, and deprive their infants of much of the natural immunity needed to protect against fatal diseases of early infancy. Extended infant antiretroviral prophylaxis reduces HIV risk during breastfeeding In many resource-poor countries, infants born to mothers with HIV receive a single dose of nevirapine (NVP) and a one-week dose of zidovudine (ZDV) to prevent transmission of HIV from the mother to her newborn. Breastfeeding now safer for infants of HIV-infected mothers An antiretroviral drug already in widespread use in the developing world to prevent the transmission of HIV from infected mothers to their newborns during childbirth has also been found to substantially cut the risk of subsequent HIV transmission during breast-feeding. HIV drug resistance risk in mothers reduced by combination of common drugs New research from the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) shows that adding a single dose of two common anti-HIV drugs can prevent HIV-positive pregnant women from developing resistance to an entire class of drugs, potentially improving future treatment options. More Nevirapine Current Events and Nevirapine News Articles |
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