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Author Topic: Multi-nation study finds reduced dose of Sustiva is just as effective  (Read 2623 times)

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Offline Cosmicdancer

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  • Posts: 199
It's good news that this could expand availability of one of the HIV meds to millions more people in the developing world for the same price.  I wonder if this could lead to Atripla being reformulated to one with 1/3rd less efavirenz (sustiva), 400 mg instead of 600 mg.  Not sure if that would reduce the side effects some people get, but it could reduce the price of the drug, in theory at least.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/07/130703101446.htm

Lifesaving HIV Treatment Could Reach Millions More People Following Landmark Study

July 4, 2013 — Millions more people could get access to life-saving HIV drug therapy, following a landmark study led by Australian researchers based at the Kirby Institute at the University of New South Wales (UNSW).

The researchers have found a lower daily dose of an important HIV drug therapy is safe and as effective in suppressing the virus as the standard recommended dose.
The findings have been presented at the International AIDS Society Conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

"This has the potential to affect the treatment of millions of HIV positive people," says UNSW Professor Sean Emery, the protocol chairperson of the study, known as ENCORE1 and Head of the Therapeutic and Vaccine Research Program at the Kirby Institute.

"A reduced daily dose should translate into a lower cost of treatment and permit more effective and efficient use of health care resources. Essentially, more people could receive this life-saving treatment for the same amount of funding."
HIV-positive people from 13 countries in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and Latin America took part in the trial. Half these people took two-thirds of the current standard daily dose of the antiretroviral (ART) efavirenz, a commonly used treatment for HIV; the other half took the standard daily dose. The 630 participants were observed regularly for a year. The results indicate that a reduction in daily dose of one third is both safe and effective compared to the higher dose currently recommended for people with HIV infection.

The research was part of a program funded with a grant of US$12.42 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Summer, 2007 - &$#@?
November, 2007 - Tested poz, 300,000 vl, 560 cd4
Feb, 2008 - 57,000 vl, 520 cd4, started Atripla
2/2008 - 5/2015 - undetectable on Atripla
May, 2015 - UD, switched to Complera
September, 2015 - UD, 980 cd4, switched to Stribild (Complera interacted with acid reflux medication)
January, 2016 - Stribild, UD, 950 cd4
June, 2016 - UD, 929 cd4

Offline Ann

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  • Member
  • Posts: 28,134
  • It just is, OK?
    • Num is sum qui mentiar tibi?
This is already being discussed in the Treatments forum.

Efavirenz 400mg vs 600mg - as good as, less CNS side effects

I'm locking this thread so all the relevant comments are in one place (in the thread linked to above).

Ann
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