Comparison of Nevirapine- and Efavirenz-Containing Antiretroviral Regimens in Antiretroviral-Naïve Patients: A Cohort Study
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in HIV Research & Clinical Practice
- Vol. 3 (4) , 296-303
- https://doi.org/10.1310/m47b-r51c-x0mc-k3gw
Abstract
Objective: Efavirenz (EFV) was superior to nevirapine (NVP) in two recent cohort studies; but data from clinical trials suggest that three studies are needed to validate cohort results. We performed a cohort analysis comparing time to treatment failure and change in plasma HIV-1 RNA from baseline in antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naïve individuals treated with NVP- or EFV-containing regimens. Method: A cohort analysis of three observational databases (N = >10,000 patients) found 1,078 ART-naïve individuals treated with NVP-containing (n = 523) or EFV-containing (n = 555) regimens. Patients were evenly matched and received at least three antiretroviral agents. The primary endpoint was time to treatment failure defined as a rebound in plasma HIV-1 RNA > 400 copies/mL. Other endpoints were change in plasma HIV-1 RNA from baseline and percent with plasma HIV-1 RNA p < .001), less decrease in plasma HIV-1 RNA (m0.51 log vs. m1.32 log; p < .001), and fewer patients with plasma HIV-1 RNA < 400 copies/mL (45% vs. 51%; p < .001). Significant factors for failure were baseline CD4 count (per 100 cell increase) or viral load (per log increase), treatment center, and year of entry (p < .05 for all comparisons). Race, gender, and background nucleoside use were insignificant factors. Multivariate analysis that included significant factors for failure demonstrated improved relative hazard with EFV compared to NVP (odds ratio = 0.50, p < .001). Conclusion: EFV-containing antiretroviral regimens were associated with superior clinical outcome, as measured by time to treatment failure. Results are commensurate with other large cohort studies comparing EFV and NVP.Keywords
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