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Boosted PI Are more Forgiving of Suboptimal Adherence than Non-boosted PI or NNRTI
Robert Gross*1, B Yip2, E Wood2, D Bangsberg3, A Justice4,5, J Montaner2, and R Hogg2
1Univ of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, US; 2Univ of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; 3Univ of California, San Francisco, US; 4Yale Univ, New Haven, CT, US; and 5VAMC, West Haven, CT, US
Background: To date, interpretations of data suggest that
the highest levels (>95%) of ART adherence are key to viral suppression.
However, differences by regimen in the amount of adherence needed to maintain
suppression are often ignored.
Methods: We assessed the association between adherence
to different regimens and viral suppression in 1634 British Columbians in the
HOMER cohort with ≥2 consecutive viral loads <500 copies/mL. Time 0 was the first of at least 2 consecutive viral
loads <500 copies/mL. Event date for breakthrough
was the second of 2 viral loads ≥1000 copies/mL
and non-events are censored at the time of last viral load <1000 ccopies/mL until October 30, 2004. ART adherence over every
2 dispensing periods was calculated as: number days of
medication was supplied by number of days between refill dates. It is a time-updated
measure dichotomized as ≥95% vs <95%. Primary
outcome was time to viral breakthrough and models were constructed separately
for protease inhibitor (PI), non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI),
and boosted-PI initial regimens. Cox proportional hazard regression analyses included
baseline variables: sex, age, injection
drug use, CD4 count, AIDS diagnosis, and physician experience.
Results: The participants included 1376 (84%) males and
383 (23%) subjects had a history of injection drug use. The median age was 39
years (IQR 33 to 46), with a median CD4 count of 200 cells/mm3 (IQR
80 to 350) and median follow-up of 29 months. A total of 752 (46%) initiated a
PI-, 631 (39%) an NNRTI-, and 251 (15%) a boosted PI-based regimen. Overall, 606
(37%) subjects had viral breakthrough. In adjusted analyses, <95% adherence
was most strongly associated with breakthrough with PI (HR 1.78; 1.41 to 2.24),
followed by NNRTI (HR 1.47; 1.01 to 2.14). In contrast, there was no association
between <95% adherence and breakthrough for boosted PI (HR 1.05; 0.46 to
2.42).
Conclusions: The lack of an association between adherence
and maintained suppression at a threshold of 95% adherence suggests that boosted
PI are more forgiving of non-adherence than either unboosted
PI or NNRTI. These results may be explained in part by higher trough
concentrations with respect to the IC90 of the virus, higher genetic
barrier to resistance of PI vs NNRTI, and prolonged
half-lives due to the ritonavir boosting. For
individuals at high risk of suboptimal adherence, using boosted PI-based regimens
may achieve higher effectiveness rates. Adherence studies should address these
differences between regimens in the evaluation of their results.
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