Nevirapine, a potent nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, produces a transient antiviral effect at < or = 200 mg/day due to the selection of resistant virus. To examine if higher levels of nevirapine could produce sustained antiviral activity, its safety, pharmacokinetics, and antiviral activity at 400 mg/day were studied in 21 patients. There was a rapid reduction in immune complex-dissociated p24 antigen and serum human immunodeficiency virus RNA concentration in all patients, and 8 of 10 patients had > 50% reduction at 8 weeks. Nevirapine-resistant virus was isolated from all subjects tested at 12 weeks: The mean plasma trough level (4.0 micrograms/mL [15.8 microM]) exceeded the mean IC50 of resistant virus. Rash developed in 48% of patients and was a dose-limiting toxicity factor in 6. These data suggest that clinical testing of potent antiviral compounds that select for drug-resistant virus is justified to determine if serum levels of drug sufficient to overcome resistant virus can be attained.
, "Combination treatment with zidovudine, didanosine, and nevirapine in infants with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection" (1997). Open Access Articles. 1686.
Nevirapine and indinavir have the potential of affecting the pharmacokinetics of each other. In a prospective trial, 24 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected subjects on stable nucleoside or no therapy were treated with 800 mg of indinavir every 8 h. After 7 days, 200 mg of nevirapine a day was added for 14 days and then increased to 200 mg twice a day. At day 7 (before nevirapine), there was a sevenfold difference among the subjects in indinavir area under the curve (AUC), and there was a significant correlation between indinavir AUC (r2=0.378, P=.019), minimum plasma concentration (Cmin; r2=0.359, P=.023), maximum plasma concentration (Cmax; r2=0.340, P=.028), and plasma HIV RNA decline. Nevirapine significantly reduced median indinavir Cmin (47.5%) and AUC (27.4%) and, to a lesser extent, Cmax (11%). Plasma HIV RNA values were =20 copies/mL in 10 of 17 (58.8%) subjects at 58 weeks or last visit. These data suggest that indinavir dosing should be dependent on drug exposure and not on cotherapy with nevirapine.
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