More research is needed to determine the metabolic implications of this apparent association and how it may drive diabetes.
"I personally gained 50lbs in 4 months when switching from Atripla to Triumeq. I have switched back to Atripla and have been struggling with weight for 3 years now. I am now also a diabetic because of this mess. The Infectious Disease Doctor I had at that time told me it was NOT the medication, it was the way I was eating. She said NO ONE ELSE had gained weight and there was NO scientific evidence of it causing weight gain, even though the insert and information I found online said weight gain was a possible side effect. Of course I told her NOT to compare me to other people in the clinic because I was an individual with a different metabolism than the other people and I was NOT just a NUMBER. I have to force myself to eat most days because I have NO appetite from all the mediation I take, on top of the fact that I drink water and green tea all day that curbs my appetite. I ended up switching to a NEW HIV SPECIALIST because I was NOT getting anywhere with the one I was with, she thought she was the god of HIV and refused to listen to any of the research studies I found on HIV." Rainbow Pastor David
People with HIV who switch from taking Atripla
(efavirenz/tenofovir/emtricitabine) to an antiretroviral regimen based
on an integrase inhibitor gained more weight than those who stayed on
Atripla in a recent study, the National AIDS Treatment Advocacy Project
reports.
Presenting their findings at the IDWeek 2017
conference in San Diego, researchers conducted a study of HIV-positive
individuals who prior to the study had been taking Atripla for at least
two years and who maintained a viral load of 1,000 or below during that
time as well as for at least 18 months after the beginning of the study.
The
study’s analysis included data on 136 people who switched to an
integrase inhibitor–based regimen, 34 who switched to a protease
inhibitor–based regimen, and 325 who stayed on Atripla. Among these
three groups, a respective 14 percent, 29 percent and 14 percent were
women, and the respective median weight before the study started was 182
pounds, 165 pounds and 177 pounds. The median age in all three groups
was about 39. The median CD4 count at the study’s outset for all
participants was above 500, indicating good overall immune health.
After
18 months, those who switched to an integrase inhibitor–based regimen
gained an average 6.38 pounds versus 1.98 pounds among those who stayed
on Atripla. There was no statistically significant difference between
the average weight gained on a protease inhibitor–based regimen (1.54
pounds) compared with that gained on Atripla, meaning any apparent
difference on that count may have been driven by chance.
Those
who switched to the integrase inhibitor–based Triumeq
(dolutegravir/abacavir/lamivudine) gained more weight (11.66 pounds)
than those who switched to regimens based on the integrase inhibitors
Isentress (raltegravir) or Vitekta (elvitegravir) (6.16 pounds), but
this difference was not statistically significant, meaning it could have
been driven by chance.
Those who switched to an
integrase inhibitor–based regimen saw their average hemoglobin A1c, a
marker for diabetes, rise from an average 6.4 percent to 6.5 percent.
However, this shift was also not statistically significant.
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