AI Article Synopsis

  • Around 1.2 million women with HIV give birth each year, many breastfeeding while on antiretroviral therapy (ART), particularly lamivudine, which can transfer into breast milk.
  • This study analyzed data from 35 Ugandan mothers to assess how lamivudine moves from plasma to breast milk, looking at the variability and factors influencing this transfer.
  • Findings included an estimated infant exposure to lamivudine that translates to about 3.34% of the maternal dose, suggesting the model used could be useful for other medications as well.

Article Abstract

Around 1.2 million women living with HIV give birth annually, majority of whom will breastfeed their infants while receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART). Lamivudine, a component of first-line ART regimens crosses from maternal plasma to breast milk, with measurable concentrations in some breastfed infants. Wide variability in plasma-to-breast milk transfer has been reported within- or across studies, probably due to differences in sampling framework. This work sought to characterize the milk-to-plasma transfer of lamivudine, quantify inter-patient variability and associated factors, and predict exposure of a breastfed infant. We explored data from an observational pharmacokinetic study that included 35 Ugandan mothers and their infants. Mothers received lamivudine doses of 150 mg twice daily or 300 mg once daily as part of their antiretroviral regimen. Pharmacokinetic sampling was undertaken across two visits approximately 8 weeks apart, providing 248 maternal plasma, 256 breast milk-, and 151 infant blood concentrations, measured across a 24-h sampling interval. A one-compartmental model best described the plasma disposition of lamivudine, with first-order absorption, interindividual variability on clearance and volume of distribution, and a proportional residual error model. A lag in time of plasma-to-breast milk drug accumulation was described using an effect compartment model with a milk-to-plasma ratio of 1.77. An estimated daily infant dose of 179.3 μg/kg (range: 125.8, 282.3) closely predicted the observed infant steady-state concentrations and translated into 3.34% (2.13, 7.20) and 3.35% (1.10, 7.15) of the standard daily maternal dose in visits 1 and 2, respectively. The established modeling framework can be extended to other drugs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11578128PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/psp4.13274DOI Listing

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