Publications by authors named "Juan A Leon Leal"

Maraviroc (MVC) is not approved for HIV-1-infected paediatric patients. This is the first assessment of the use of MVC-based salvage therapy in vertically HIV-1-infected paediatric patients in clinical settings. The results suggest that MVC-based salvage therapy is useful in children and adolescents with extensive resistance profile leading to maintained virological suppression in up to 88% of the patients with CCR5-tropic virus.

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Background: We studied HIV coreceptor tropism in vertically HIV-infected children and adolescents with the objective of predicting the proportion of children and adolescents that could be treated with CCR5 (R5) antagonists.

Methods: One hundred eighteen multidrug-resistant pediatric patients (36 children and 82 adolescents) were enrolled in a cross-sectional study. Viral tropism was assessed using the new phenotypic HIV-1 tropism coreceptor assay information and Trofile.

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Background: There are pediatric patients receiving many highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) regimens entailing drug resistance mutations that complicate HAART effective therapies.

Methods: This was a multicenter retrospective study of 19 multidrug-resistant children and adolescents enrolled from July 2007 to October 2009. Patients were nonresponders because no reduction in HIV type 1 (HIV-1) RNA to undetectable levels was observed during their previous antiretroviral treatment history.

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Fosamprenavir (FPV) efficacy in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected pediatric patients is still being evaluated in ongoing clinical trials. The long-term efficacy and safety of FPV boosted with ritonavir (FPV/r) was evaluated in 20 antiretroviral-naive and antiretroviral-experienced HIV-vertically infected pediatric patients. Analyses of CD4(+) T-cells, HIV-ribonucleic acid (RNA), and clinical status were performed during a median of 180 weeks.

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Background: HIV-associated encephalopathy (HIV-AE) is a severe neurologic condition that affects HIV-infected children. The potential benefit of antiretroviral (ARV) agents with good cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) penetration remains to be defined. Abacavir (ABC) achieves good CSF concentrations and studies of high-dose ABC showed benefit in adults with HIV dementia.

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