GSK
has added myocardial infarction and hypercholesterolemia
to the Adverse Reactions section of the Lexiva
Tablets and Oral Suspension prescribing information
(Section 6.2 Postmarketing Experience). Elevations
in triglyceride levels are already described
in the Adverse Reactions section of the Lexiva
Tablets and Oral Suspension prescribing information
(Section 5.8 Warnings and Precautions, Section
6.1 Clinical Trials).
GSK
has modified the existing Warnings and Precautions
statement (Section 5.8 Lipid Elevations)
in the prescribing information for Lexiva
Tablets and Oral Suspension to highlight
that increases in cholesterol have occurred
with treatment. This statement highlights
the importance of lipids management by including
a recommendation that triglyceride and cholesterol
testing should be performed prior to initiating
therapy with Lexiva Tablets and Oral Suspension
and at periodic intervals during therapy.
GSK is in communication with FDA and this
issue will be closely monitored.
Combination
antiretroviral therapy has been associated
with redistribution of body fat (lipodystrophy)
in HIV-infected patients. Clinical examination
should include evaluation for physical signs
of fat redistribution.
Triglyceride
and cholesterol levels should be checked prior
to initiating therapy with Lexiva Tablets
and Oral Suspension and at periodic intervals
during therapy. Appropriate clinical management
of lipid disorders should be initiated as
required.
Other
modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular
disease (such as hypertension, diabetes
and smoking) should be monitored in HIV-infected
subjects and managed as clinically appropriate.
At
an international HIV conference (CROI, February
2009), data from a case-control study nested
within the French Hospital Database on HIV
were reported [Abstract
#43LB].
The
objective of the study, requested by the European
Medicines Evaluation Agency (EMEA), was to
analyze the effect of exposure to specific
nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
(NRTIs) and PIs on the risk of myocardial
infarction. Several conditional logistic regression
models were used to assess the association
of (i) cumulative exposure to specific NRTIs,
(ii) recent (current or within 6 months) and
past exposure (>6 months ago) to specific
NRTIs, and (iii) cumulative exposure to specific
PIs on the risk of myocardial infarction.
The study reported an association between
an increased risk of myocardial infarction
and cumulative exposure to fosamprenavir/amprenavir
(OR 1.52 per additional year of exposure;
95% CI, 1.19-1.95).
Myocardial
infarction has already been identified as
a signal for the PI class in the ongoing observational
Data Collection on Adverse Events of Anti-HIV
Drugs (DAD) cohort. Specific analysis of ART
[antiretroviral therapy] drug classes showed
the relative risk of myocardial infarction
to be higher with PI therapy (16% increase
per year) compared with other ART classes.
The signal is plausible and may be partly
explained by the propensity of the PI class
to raise blood lipids.
Suppression
of viral replication in HIV disease with antiretroviral
therapy is of the utmost importance. Patients
should NOT discontinue treatment on their
own. All treatment decisions should be explored
in consultation with healthcare professionals.
Physicians
should continue to monitor a patient's cardiovascular
risk as part of regular reviews and seek to
adjust modifiable risk factors. The profile
of each antiretroviral agent is different
and treatment decisions should always be personalized
for an individual patient with careful consideration
of the overall absolute risks and the benefits
of effective long-term treatment.
Indication, Important Safety Information,
and Full Prescribing Information for Lexiva
Tablets and Oral Suspension are available
at http://www.lexiva.com/index.html.
Call
for Reporting
GlaxoSmithKline reminds healthcare professionals
to continue to report adverse reactions to
FDA MedWatch at 1-800-FDA-1088 or www.fda.gov/medwatch
in accordance with the national spontaneous
reporting system rules.
GlaxoSmithKline
encourages healthcare professionals to continue
to report suspected adverse reactions, pregnancy,
overdose and unexpected benefits of Lexiva
Tablets and Oral Suspension to GSK at 1-888-825-5249.