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Long-Term Efficacy, Tolerability, and Renal Safety of Atazanavir/Ritonavir-based Antiretroviral Therapy in a Cohort of Treatment-Naïve Patients with HIV-1 Infection: the REMAIN Study.

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2016

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Teófilo, Eugénio
Rocha-Pereira, Nuno
Kuhlmann, Birger
Antela, Antonio
Knechten, Heribert
Santos, Jesús
Jiménez-Expósito, Maria Jesús
REMAIN study group

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Boosted protease inhibitors (PIs), including ritonavir-boosted atazanavir (ATV/r), are a recommended option for the initial treatment of HIV-1 infection based upon clinical trial data; however, long-term real-life clinical data are limited. We evaluated the long-term use of ATV/r as a component of antiretroviral combination therapy in the real-life setting in the REMAIN study. This was an observational cohort study conducted at sites across Germany, Portugal, and Spain. Retrospective historical and prospective longitudinal follow-up data were extracted every six months from medical records of HIV-infected treatment-naïve patients aged ≥ 18 years initiating a first-line ATV/r-containing regimen. Eligible patients (n = 517) were followed up for a median of 3.4 years. The proportion remaining on ATV/r at 5 years was 51.5% with an estimated Kaplan-Meier median time to treatment discontinuation of 4.9 years. Principal reasons for discontinuation were adverse events (15.9%; 8.9% due to hyperbilirubinemia) and virologic failure (6.8%). The Kaplan-Meier probability of not having virologic failure (HIV-1 RNA  In a real-life clinical setting over five years, treatment-naïve patients with HIV-1 infection initiating an ATV/r-based regimen showed sustained virologic suppression, an overall treatment persistence rate of 51.5%, an absence of treatment-emergent major PI resistance mutations at virologic failure, a long-term safety profile consistent with that observed in clinical trials, and no significant decline in renal function.

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Adolescent
Adult
Atazanavir Sulfate
Cohort Studies
Drug Administration Schedule
Europe
Female
HIV Infections
HIV-1
Humans
Kidney Diseases
Male
Middle Aged
Ritonavir
Treatment Outcome
Young Adult

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Keywords

HIV-1, antiretroviral therapy, estimated glomerular filtration rate, hyperbilirubinemia, observational study, persistence, resistance, ritonavir-boosted atazanavir

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