AI Article Synopsis

  • Classical antiretroviral drugs can affect metabolic and organ functions, but new drugs like Enfuvirtide (T20) and Raltegravir (RAL) have not been extensively studied for safety.
  • In a study with 26 healthy volunteers, participants received either T20 or RAL for one week, with a focus on monitoring various health markers related to metabolism and organ function.
  • The results showed no significant changes in toxicity markers from either drug, suggesting that T20 and RAL are safe in the short term for healthy individuals without HIV or other treatments.

Article Abstract

Context: Classical antiretroviral agents may acutely impact on metabolic, mitochondrial, renal and hepatic function in HIV-infected and uninfected persons. Fusion and integrase inhibitors are supposed to be safer, but have been scarcely investigated. To avoid any interference with HIV or other antiretrovirals, we assessed markers of these toxicities in healthy adult volunteers treated with Enfuvirtide (T20) or Raltegravir (RAL).

Methods: Twenty-six healthy participants were randomized to T20/90mg vs. placebo (n = 12) or RAL/400mg vs. placebo (n = 14) every 12h in two 7-day periods separated by a 4-week washout period. Major end-points were changes in lipid profile (total cholesterol, high-density-lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, low-density-lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol, triglycerides), insulin resistance (glucose) and mitochondrial toxicity (mitochondrial DNA content-mtDNA-in peripheral blood mononuclear cells). Renal and hepatic toxicity (creatinine, alanine transaminase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), bilirubin and total plasma proteins) and overall safety were also analysed. Effect of period, treatment, and basal measures were evaluated for each end-point.

Results: Neither T20-administration nor RAL-administration yielded to any statistic significant change in the markers of metabolic, mitochondrial, renal or hepatic toxicity assessed. No symptoms indicative of drug toxicity were neither found in any subject.

Conclusions: In absence of HIV infection, or concomitant treatment, short-term exposure to T20 or RAL in healthy adult volunteers did not lead to any indicative changes in toxicity markers thus presuming the safe profile of both drugs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6532851PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0216712PLOS

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