Valacyclovir treatment is comparable to famciclovir treatment in speeding the resolution of zoster-associated pain and postherpetic neuralgia. Current wholesale prices indicate that valacyclovir is the more cost-effective treatment for herpes zoster ($83.90 vs $140.70 per course).
Our objective was to evaluate valaciclovir for anogenital herpes in HIV-infected individuals using 2 controlled trials conducted before highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) was used. In Study 1, 1062 patients (CD4+ > or = 100 cells/mm(3)) received suppressive valaciclovir or aciclovir for one year and were assessed monthly. In Study 2, 467 patients were treated episodically for > or =5 days with valaciclovir or aciclovir and evaluated daily. Valaciclovir was as effective as aciclovir for suppression and episodic treatment of herpes. Hazard ratios [95% confidence interval (CI)] for time to recurrence for valaciclovir 500 mg twice daily and 1000 mg once daily vs aciclovir were 0.73[0.50, 1.06], P=0.10, and 1.31[0.94, 1.82], P=0.11. Valaciclovir 500 mg twice daily was superior to 1000 mg once daily, P=0.001. Valaciclovir 1000 mg twice daily was comparable to aciclovir on herpes episode duration (hazard ratio 0.92[0.75, 1.14]). Adverse events were similar among treatments. In conclusion, valaciclovir is a safe, effective, convenient alternative to aciclovir for HSV infection in HIV-infected individuals.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with herpes zoster at the time of presentation predict the duration and severity of pain on long-term follow-up. Analyses by Cox's proportional hazard models of six databases from controlled trials of antiviral drugs (total subjects = 2367) identified covariates for zoster-associated pain; all tests for significance were two-sided. Age strongly influenced pain outcome: patients > or = 50 years old were significantly more likely to have prolonged zoster-associated pain compared with those < 30 years old. Patients with prodromal symptoms or moderate or severe pain at presentation were also more likely to experience prolonged zoster-associated pain. Neither time to initiating treatment after rash onset nor sex of patient influenced pain outcome. Advancing age, prodromal symptoms, and acute pain severity at presentation predicted those individuals most at risk of prolonged pain and postherpetic neuralgia. When two or more of these factors were present, the risk of persistent pain was increased.
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