A Smart + Strong Site
Subscribe to:
E-newsletters
POZ magazine
POZ Personals
Sign In / Join
Username:
Password:

Back to home » Treatment News » Top Stories

Most Popular Stories
Post-Conference Report Provides HIV Cure Roadmap
Life Expectancy With HIV Increases Dramatically
Improper Use of a Neti Pot Can Be Fatal
Animal Studies Suggest Anti-Reservoir Drugs May Help 'Functionally Cure' HIV
Tenofovir Microbicide Gel Falters in Major HIV Prevention Study
Gold Drug Shows HIV Eradication Potential
New Studies Under Way of Sangamo's Possible 'Functional Cure' Gene Therapy
What's That Mean?
(just double-click it!)

If you don't understand one of the words in this article, just double-click it. A window will open with a definition from mondofacto's On-line Medical Dictionary. If the double-click feature doesn't work in your browser, you can enter the word below:

Most Popular Lessons
Aging & HIV
The HIV Life Cycle
Shingles
Herpes Simplex Virus
Syphilis & Neurosyphilis
Treatments for Opportunistic Infections (OIs)
What is AIDS & HIV?
More News

Have medical or treatment news about HIV? Send press releases, news tips and other announcements to editors@aidsmeds.com.

Click here for more news


emailrssprint

July 22, 2009

Efavirenz Five-Days-On, Two-Off, Works as Well as Continuous Treatment

by David Evans

People who took a regimen including efavirenz (found in Sustiva and Atripla) for five days each week, with two-days off over the weekend, had similar viral load reductions and side effects as people who took their regimen continuously. What’s more, people on the on-off approach reported universally that they preferred intermittent therapy to continuous therapy. Cal Cohen, MD, from the Community Research Initiative (CRI) in Boston, presented the study at the Fifth International AIDS Society (IAS) Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town.

People with HIV have long sought the opportunity to take their antiretroviral therapy less often, but results of treatment interruption trials have been mixed, at least for longer interruptions. The researchers at CRI set out to determine whether short, two-day, weekly treatment interruptions may be safe and effective. Their study, Five-days-On, Two-days Off (FOTO), enrolled 60 HIV-positive patients who were new to HIV treatment. Half were randomized to the intermittent treatment arm, and half to the continuous therapy arm.

Cohen previously presented 24-week data from the study in November 2008, at the Ninth International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection in Glasgow. That early look at the data was promising, and the 48-week data have continued in the same vein.

Ten people dropped out of the study before the end of the 48 weeks. All had a viral load of less than 50 copies at the time they discontinued. Reasons for discontinuation included loss to follow-up, withdrawal of consent to participate and one pregnancy.

At the 24-week time point, 100 percent of the patients in the interruption arm had a viral load of less than 50 copies, compared with 86 percent in the continuous therapy arm. After 24 weeks, all of the patients in the continuous therapy arm switched to intermittent therapy. At 48 weeks, 90 percent of those participants had a viral load less than 50 copies.

Adherence in neither group was superior at 24 weeks. Eight percent of people in the intermittent therapy arm reported at week 24 that they took an extra day off treatment at least once during the first 24 weeks. Eleven percent in the continuous therapy arm reported missing a dose. Yet despite the extra doses missed, people in the intermittent treatment arm did remarkably well.

Though the study is small and larger studies will be needed to confirm the efficacy and safety of this strategy, people in the study liked it quite a bit. Those who’d been on the continuous therapy arm and then switched to intermittent treatment told researchers that they much preferred taking intermittent treatment. The authors also note that the total cost of treating a patient on intermittent therapy is 28 percent less than patients on continuous therapy.

Search: Efavirenz, Sustiva, Atripla, FOTO, intermittent treatment, treatment interruption, Cal Cohen


Scroll down to comment on this story.

emailrssprint

Name:

(will display; 2-50 characters)

Email:

(will NOT display)

City:

(will display; optional)

Comment (500 characters left):

(Note: The AIDSmeds team review all comments before they are posted. Please do not include ":" "@" "<" ">" in your comment. The opinions expressed by people providing comments are theirs alone. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Smart + Strong, which is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by people providing comments.)

| Posting Rules

Previous Comments:

comments 1 - 2 (of 2 total)    

Dan, New BEDFORD, 2012-01-23 21:27:56
I did the switch to the five day on and two days off approach over a year ago, against my nervious Dr's advise....and Im still undetectable. IT works...you feel the defference when not on those meds 7 days a wk.

Trippin On Atripla, Los Angeles, 2009-08-10 05:34:10
Has anyone in the US tried this regimen? (5 days on/2 days off) If so please feel free to comment/elaborate so others can benefit from your experience. I'm curious if this is just too new and therefore most health care providers are going to avoid it until further study has been done.

comments 1 - 2 (of 2 total)    


[Go to top]

Quick Links
AIDSmeds en Español
About HIV and AIDS
Lab Tests
Clinical Trials
HIV Meds
Starting Treatment
Switching Treatment
Drug Resistance
Side Effects
Disclosure
Lipodystrophy
Hepatitis & HIV
Women & Children
Fact Sheets
Treatment News
Community Forums
Blogs
Conference Coverage
Health Services Directory
POZ Magazine


    GaBoi25
    Atlanta
    Georgia


    mtfreek1975
    Indianapolis
    Indiana


    astoria85
    nyc
    New York


    jeffinga
    atlanta
    Georgia
Click here to join POZ Personals!
Conference Coverage

6th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2011)
Rome, Italy
July 17 - 20, 2011


18th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2011)
Boston, MA
February 27 - March 2, 2011


XVIII International AIDS Conference
Vienna, Austria
July 18-23, 2010

more conference coverage


[ about AIDSmeds | AIDSmeds advisory board | our staff | advertising policy | advertise/contact us]
© 2012 Smart + Strong. All Rights Reserved. Terms of use and Your privacy.
Smart + Strong® is a registered trademark of CDM Publishing, LLC.