Home Search Abstracts Browse Sessions Program Committee E-mail Abstract Author View Session


Session 85 Poster Abstracts
Pharmacology of Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors
Tuesday, 1:30 - 3:30 pm
Poster Hall


604    
Sex and Weight as Covariates in the Pharmacokinetics of Efavirenz, Indinavir, and Nelfinavir
J Hitti*1, S Rosenkranz2, S Cohn3, L Kamemoto4, A Kashuba5, E Caten2, and F Aweeka6
1Univ. of Washington, Seattle, USA; 2Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Boston, MA, USA; 3Univ. of Rochester, NY, USA; 4Univ. of Hawaii, Honolulu, USA; 5Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA; and 6Univ. of California, San Francisco, USA

Background:  Recent data suggest that women may have decreased clearance of saquinavir compared to men. Our objective was to examine sex-specific systemic exposures for other selected antiretroviral medications and to determine whether any observed sex differences could be explained by weight.

Methods:  We conducted a retrospective analysis of the pharmacokinetics of efavirenz, indinavir and nelfinavir and its metabolite M8 in women and men from 6 AIDS Clinical Trials Group studies with intensive sampling (5 data points). Data were available from 15 women and 82 men on efavirenz (600 mg once daily), 14 women and 63 men on indinavir (dose-normalized to 1200 mg twice daily) and 20 women and 133 men on nelfinavir (1250 mg twice daily). Subjects were on stable antiretroviral therapy for 7 days. Area under the concentration-time curve (AUC, ng*h/mL) was calculated from 0 to 24 hours for efavirenz, from 0 to 12 hours for indinavir, and from 0 to 6 hours for nelfinavir and M8 (for a truncated AUC). T-tests, ANOVA and regression models were used to test the univariate effects of sex, co-administered antiretroviral medications, weight and body mass index on log-transformed AUC. The final analysis of covariance models included sex and weight but not their interaction, and were used to predict the AUCs for women and men at an average weight of 70 kg and an 94th percentile weight of 100 kg.

Results:  Women had significantly lower efavirenz AUC compared with men, even after adjustment for weight (p <0.05). There were no significant sex differences in the AUC of indinavir, nelfinavir, or M8. Increased weight was significantly associated with lower efavirenz and indinavir AUC (p <0.05). The presence or absence of co-administered antiretroviral medications did not modify these observed associations. 

 

Predicted AUC (ng*h/mL) for Women and Men at 2 Body Weights

Drug

70 kg women

70 kg

men

100 kg women

100 kg

men

Sex

p

Weight

p

Efavirenz

41,382

53,890

33,654

43,827

<0.05

<0.05

Indinavir

37,143

38,910

19,528

20,457

NS

<0.05

Nelfinavir

13,904

13,761

14,831

14,678

NS

NS

M8

2,276

2,274

2,510

2,508

NS

NS

 

Conclusions:  Female sex was associated with lower efavirenz AUC regardless of weight. Greater weight was associated with lower AUC for efavirenz and indinavir in both sexes. These data suggest differences in the absorption or elimination of efavirenz between men and women. Further evaluations of exposure-efficacy/toxicity relationships are warranted with these medications.

 

Keywords: pharmacology; women