Raltegravir 
                          (Isentress), Etravirine (Intelence), and Boosted Darunavir 
                          (Prezista) Is Highly Effective for Treatment-experienced 
                          Adolescents
                          
                          
                            
                             
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                                    | SUMMARY: 
                                      An antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimen 
                                      containing 3 recently approved anti-HIV 
                                      drugs -- the integrase inhibitor raltegravir 
                                      (Isentress), the next generation non-nucleoside 
                                      reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) 
                                      etravirine 
                                      (Intelence), and the ritonavir-boosted 
                                      protease inhibitor darunavir 
                                      (Prezista) -- was well tolerated and 
                                      produced good viral suppression and CD4 
                                      cell gains in heavily treatment-experienced 
                                      adolescents, according to a study published 
                                      in the November 
                                      13, 2009 issue of AIDS. |  |  |  | 
                             
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                          By 
                            Liz Highleyman
                            
                            As previously reported, 2 
                            recent studies demonstrated that a triple combination 
                            regimen of raltegravir, etravirine, and darunavir/ritonavir 
                            was well tolerated and produced high rates of virological 
                            suppression in heavily treatment-experienced adult 
                            HIV patients with extensively drug-resistant virus. 
                            
                          Now, 
                            French researchers have reported that the same regimen 
                            is also effective for older children and adolescents 
                            with HIV.
                          Isabelle 
                            Thuret and colleagues studies 12 highly treatment-experienced 
                            patients with an average age of 15 years who contracted 
                            HIV via perinatal transmission, and thus were infected 
                            for their entire lives. At study entry, the group 
                            had relatively advanced HIV disease, with a median 
                            viral load of about 100,000 copies/mL and a median 
                            CD4 cell count of 124 cells/mm3. 
                          Participants 
                            had a history of virological failure and resistance 
                            to drugs in the first 3 antiretroviral classes (nucleoside/nucleotide 
                            reverse transcriptase inhibitors, NNRTIs, and protease 
                            inhibitors). All patients received raltegravir, 
                            etravirine, and darunavir/ritonavir through an expanded 
                            access program in France. 
                            
                            Results 
                            
                          
                             
                              |  | After 
                                a median follow-up period of 12 months, 6 of the 
                                12 patients (50%) had undetectable HIV viral load 
                                < 50 copies/mL. | 
                             
                              |  | 11 
                                of the 12 (92%) had HIV RNA < 400 copies/mL. | 
                             
                              |  | At 
                                12 months, the median CD4 cell count had increased 
                                to 500 cells/mm3. | 
                             
                              |  | No 
                                participants developed an AIDS-related illness 
                                or died during follow-up. | 
                             
                              |  | No 
                                clinical side effects or laboratory abnormalities 
                                more serious than grade 2 (moderate) were reported. | 
                             
                              |  | Only 
                                1 participant discontinued therapy prematurely 
                                due to adverse events. | 
                          
                           
                            Based on these findings, the investigators concluded 
                            that "preliminary results in adolescents with 
                            extensive multidrug resistant virus are encouraging," 
                            and characterized the tolerability and efficacy of 
                            the regimen as "remarkable."
                          In 
                            their discussion, the authors wrote, "the majority 
                            of extensively treated adolescents can be virologically 
                            controlled with by a salvage regimen consisting of 
                            a combination of new drugs, despite a long record 
                            of suboptimal treatment and viral multi-resistance."
                          11/17/09
                          Reference
                            I Thuret, M-L Chaix, C Tamalet, and others. Raltegravir, 
                            etravirine and r-darunavir combination in adolescents 
                            with multidrug-resistant virus. AIDS 23(17): 
                            2364-2366. November 13, 2009. (Abstract).