Objective: To determine if stavudine (alpha4T)-associated mitochondrial toxicity could be reversed by substitution with another nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor. As apoptosis and dysfunction of electron transport chain (ETC) activities may underlie mitochondrial toxicity, these parameters were also evaluated.
Design: The 16 participants (on d4T for >3 years; with lipoatrophy and/or hyperlactatemia) substituted abacavir or zidovudine for stavudine in their antiretroviral regimen.
Stavudine (d4T) has been observed in clinical trials and cohort studies to be more often implicated in cases of hyperlactatemia than other nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, possibly because of its relatively greater propensity to induce mitochondrial toxicity. The ESS40010 study was a 48-week, open-label, switch study that assessed changes in serum lactate levels and signs/symptoms of hyperlactatemia after substitution of abacavir (n = 86) or zidovudine (n = 32) for d4T in 118 virologically suppressed HIV-infected patients (HIV-1 RNA <400 copies/mL) who had developed serum lactate concentrations > or =2.2 mmol/L (n = 16) or had remained normolactatemic (n = 102) after receiving > or =6 months of d4T-based treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Infect Dis
January 2004
Stavudine use is a contributing factor for lipoatrophy, whereas use of abacavir or zidovudine is less likely to cause this complication. The TARHEEL study was a 48-week, open-label study that assessed changes in lipoatrophy after abacavir (86 patients [73%]) or zidovudine (32 patients [27%]), 300 mg twice daily, was substituted for stavudine for 118 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients (HIV type 1 RNA level, <400 copies/mL) with virological suppression who had developed lipoatrophy after > or =6 months of stavudine-based treatment. At week 48, full-body dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry demonstrated a median increase in arm fat of 35%, leg fat of 12%, and trunk fat of 18%, compared with the baseline level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA post hoc analysis of safety data from study protocol NZT40012 assessed the incidence of conditions defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 86 zidovudine-naïve, antiretroviral-experienced patients with HIV-1 infection who responded poorly (plasma HIV-1 RNA > 1000 copies/mL) despite at least 4 months' treatment with stavudine-containing regimens. Peripheral neuropathy occurred in 21%; other conditions were seen less frequently (candidiasis [13%], herpes zoster [12%], diarrhea lasting > 1 month [9%], Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia [9%], and wasting syndrome [8%]). The incidence of peripheral neuropathy rose significantly with the number of drugs comprising treatment regimens (> or = 4 vs 1-3; P = .
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