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New guidelines help sort out HIV drug maze
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 13 - 08 - 2006


Simpler drug combinations can
control the AIDS virus well, researchers said on Sunday in
several reports that will help in trying to mix and match
nearly two dozen different HIV drugs in lifesaving cocktails, Reuters reported.
The reports published in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, and presented to the International AIDS
Conference in Toronto, show that simplified drug regimens can
be safe and effective, and safely relieve side-effects in some
patients.
The HIV drugs, called antiretroviral drugs, are usually
combined into three-drug cocktails called highly active
antiretroviral therapy or HAART. They once had to be carefully
planned out, with patients forced to take several different
pills at various times of day.
Now combined pills make that easier -- with one once-a-day
pill on the market. And some patients might safely skip some of
the more toxic drugs, the studies suggest.
"We now have 22 antiretroviral agents in five classes that
are FDA (U.S. Food and Drug Administration) approved," Dr.
Scott Hammer of Columbia University in New York told a news
conference.
Some are clearly meant for patients who have few options
because the virus in their bodies has evolved to resist most
drugs. These include many of the newer drugs.
But there is clear evidence that some of the mainstay drugs
can keep the virus suppressed, which in turn keeps the immune
system, and patients, healthy.
"Despite the optimism, we are still faced with lots of drug
toxicity issues," Hammer said. And if people take one drug, the
virus can develop something called cross-resistance to other
drugs.
Guidelines issued on Sunday by the non-profit
International AIDS Society-USA are aimed at sorting through the
choices, and mesh with World Health Organization guidelines.
WHEN TO START AND WHAT TO START WITH
Both groups say a new HIV patient should start taking the
drugs as soon as the immune system cells that are destroyed by
the virus reach a certain level.
And they should start on a three-drug combination of the
oldest class of HIV drugs, called nucleoside or nucleotide
reverse transcriptase inhibitors, along with either a
non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) or a
protease inhibitor.
Because protease inhibitors are expensive, WHO recommends
waiting until they are needed.
The first once-a-day pill to hit the market, Atripla, meets
these guidelines. A cooperative venture by Gilead Sciences Inc.
, which makes the NRTIs Emtriva and Viread, with Bristol-Myers
Squibb, which makes the NNRTI Sustiva, the pill contains one
of the recommended three-drug regimens.
There are also generic drugs made in Thailand, Brazil and
elsewhere, as well as two-and three-drug combinations that can
be taken twice a day with other drugs.
Other research suggests it may be safe to leave out some of
the drugs.
Susan Swindells of the University of Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha and colleagues tested the use of atazanavir, a protease
inhibitor sold under the name Reyataz by Bristol-Myers Squibb,
combined with a small dose of another protease inhibitor called
ritonavir -- known as "boosting."
They tested it on 34 patients who had been taking a
three-dose combination and found the once-a-day, two-dose
regimen kept them just as healthy.
"I don't think it is ready for the general public,"
commented Hammer, who also worked on the study.
A third study tested whether adding a fourth drug to the
mix would help new HIV patients get the virus under control
more quickly, but found it did not help any, and cost more.


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