Issue: November 2010
November 01, 2010
2 min read
Save

Full-dose nevirapine may lead to rash in children with HIV

Mulenga V. Clin Infect Dis. 2010;51:1081-1089.

Issue: November 2010
You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

A full-dose regimen of stavudine, lamivudine and nevirapine was linked to high rates of rash but only a 12% rate of clinical toxicity, according to study results.

The fixed-dose combination of scored, dispersible stavudine, lamivudine and nevirapine (Triomune Baby/Junior, Cipla Pharmaceuticals) has correct dose ratios for children with HIV, including a full dose of nevirapine. However, this regimen cannot be used to escalate doses of nevirapine.

In the current study, children were randomly assigned antiretroviral therapy initiation with the full-dose nevirapine regimen in the morning and evening or a regimen involving escalating dose of nevirapine — which was determined to be the Triomune formulation in the morning and stavudine-lamivudine (Lamivir, Cipla) in the evening — for 14 days, followed by full dosing thereafter.

The primary outcome measure was clinical or laboratory grade 3 or 4 adverse events related to nevirapine.

The 211 children in the final analysis — 105 in the full-dose arm and 106 in the dose-escalation arm — had a median age of 5 years (interquartile range [IQR], 2-9 years) and a median CD4 cell percentage of 13% (IQR, 8%-18%). Follow-up was conducted for a median of 92 weeks (IQR, 68-116 weeks).

Thirty-one grade 3 or 4 adverse events that were definitely/probably or uncertainly associated with nevirapine were observed in the full-dose group (18 per 100 child-years) vs. 29 in the dose-escalation group (16.5 per 100 child-years), for an incidence rate ratio of 1.09 (95% CI, 0.63-1.87). All adverse events reported were asymptomatic.

Elevations in aminotransferase or aspartate aminotransferase levels were observed in 11 children in the full-dose group and three children in the escalating-dose group. All of these events were resolved without a change or interruption in nevirapine dosing.

No children developed grade 3 or 4 rashes, but 15 children developed grade 1 or 2 rashes. When rash occurred, efavirenz was substituted in two children in the full-dose group and one child in the dose-escalation group; three children in the full-dose group continued nevirapine after rash; eight children in the full-dose group and one child in the dose-escalation group temporarily interrupted nevirapine and then achieved successful dose escalation.

Older age (P=.003) and higher CD4 cell counts for age (P=.03) predicted rash.

There were 22 deaths; 12 in the full-dose group and 10 in the dose-escalation group. One death in the full-dose group and one death in the dose-escalation group occurred before 4 weeks of follow-up. Independent review determined that none of the deaths were drug-related.

“Dual pediatric stavudine-lamivudine minitablets are preferred for safe and simple [dose escalation],” the researchers wrote. “If unavailable, initiating [full dose] Triomune requires timely review for rash, which could be managed by temporary reduction to half-dose Triomune or efavirenz substitution.”