Incidence of resistance in a double-blind study comparing lopinavir/ritonavir plus stavudine and lamivudine to nelfinavir plus stavudine and lamivudine

DJ Kempf, MS King, B Bernstein… - The Journal of …, 2004 - academic.oup.com
DJ Kempf, MS King, B Bernstein, P Cernohous, E Bauer, J Moseley, K Gu, A Hsu, S Brun…
The Journal of infectious diseases, 2004academic.oup.com
Study M98-863 was a double-blind, randomized, phase 3 study that compared
lopinavir/ritonavir with nelfinavir, each coadministered with stavudine and lamivudine, in 653
antiretroviral therapy–naive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1–infected subjects.
The incidence of HIV drug resistance was analyzed using baseline and rebound virus
isolates from subjects with plasma HIV RNA> 400 copies/mL from weeks 24 to 108 of
therapy. No evidence of genotypic or phenotypic resistance to lopinavir/ritonavir, defined as …
Abstract
Study M98-863 was a double-blind, randomized, phase 3 study that compared lopinavir/ritonavir with nelfinavir, each coadministered with stavudine and lamivudine, in 653 antiretroviral therapy–naive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1–infected subjects. The incidence of HIV drug resistance was analyzed using baseline and rebound virus isolates from subjects with plasma HIV RNA >400 copies/mL from weeks 24 to 108 of therapy. No evidence of genotypic or phenotypic resistance to lopinavir/ritonavir, defined as any active site or primary mutation in HIV protease, was detected in virus isolates from 51 lopinavir/ritonavir-treated subjects with available genotypes. Primary mutations related to nelfinavir resistance (D30N and/or L90M) were observed in 43 (45%) of 96 nelfinavir-treated subjects. Resistance to lamivudine and stavudine was also significantly higher in nelfinavir-treated versus lopinavir/ritonavir-treated subjects. These differences suggest substantially different genetic and pharmacological barriers to resistance for these 2 protease inhibitors and may have implications for strategies for initiating antiretroviral therapy
Oxford University Press