People with well controlled HIV who cut back on taking Atripla
(efavirenz/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine) from daily to
three times a week maintained an undetectable viral load for six months,
aidsmap reports. Researchers conducted an analysis of 61 HIV-positive
people taking once-daily Atripla who had an undetectable viral load for
at least two years, had never developed virologic failure and had no
known resistance to Atripla’s components. They presented their findings
at the ASM Microbe 2016 conference in Boston.
The
participants were randomly assigned to continue taking daily Atripla or
to take it only every Monday, Wednesday and Friday for 24 weeks.
Researchers measured their viral loads at the study’s outset and at
weeks 12 and 24 in both study arms as well as at weeks 1, 2, 4, 6 and 8
in the three-times-per-week arm.
The treatment was
well tolerated, with everyone completing the study. According to patient
questionnaires and pill counts the participants adhered well to their
regimens.
No one in the study developed virologic
failure, nor did anyone develop a detectable viral load, even according
to a single-copy assay.
At the end of the study,
scores on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index improved among those taking
Atripla three times a week. (The efavirenz component of Atripla is
notorious for causing sleep disturbances.)
Those
taking Atripla less frequently saw their femur bone density scores
increase slightly, although their lumbar spine density did not change.
They also experienced an improvement in their kidney biomarkers.
Cholesterol levels rose among those taking Atripla less frequently,
although to a lesser extent than among those taking the HIV treatment
daily.
To read the aidsmap article, click here.
To read the conference abstract, click here.
Read more articles here: POZ
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