Pharmacokinetics, Efficacy, and Safety of Darunavir/Ritonavir 800/100 mg Once-Daily in Treatment-Naïve and -Experienced Patients
- 1 December 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in HIV Research & Clinical Practice
- Vol. 9 (6) , 418-427
- https://doi.org/10.1310/hct0906-418
Abstract
Darunavir is a new protease inhibitor (PI) with in vitro activity against wild-type and PI-resistant HIV; it is used with the pharmacokinetic booster ritonavir. The currently approved dose of darunavir/ritonavir is 600/100 mg twice-daily, licensed for treatment-experienced patients. However, during the clinical development of darunavir, a range of once-daily and twice-daily doses of darunavir/ritonavir were evaluated. The relatively long terminal elimination plasma half-life of darunavir (15 hours) supports once-daily dosing. In treatment-naïve patients, the ARTEMIS trial has shown high rates of HIV RNA suppression for darunavir-ritonavir at the 800/100 mg once-daily dose (84% with HIV RNA 50 of 55 ng/mL for all 335 patients evaluated in the ARTEMIS trial. Once-daily darunavir/ritonavir has also been evaluated in treatment-experienced patients in the TMC114-C207 proof-of-principle trial and the POWER 1 and 2 trials. For the overall POWER trial population, with significant baseline resistance to PIs, the rates of HIV RNA suppression <50 copies/mL at Week 24 for darunavir/ritonavir 800/100 mg once-daily were lower than for the 600/100 mg twice-daily dosage (31% vs. 47%, respectively). However, for patients with no genotypic darunavir resistance-associated mutations at baseline, rates of HIV RNA suppression were 62% and 67% for the 800/100 mg once-daily and 600/100 mg twice-daily doses. The current evidence from clinical trials of darunavir/ritonavir supports the efficacy of the 800/100 mg once-daily dose for treatment-naïve patients and further evaluation for treatment-experienced patients with no genotypic resistance to darunavir.Keywords
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