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New drug combo helps HIV patients with few options
Mail and guardian 2007-07-06
A combination of two experimental AIDS drugs can help control the deadly virus in people who are infected with highly resistant forms, an international team of researchers reported on Thursday.
The two drugs called etravirine, or TMC125, and darunavir, or TMC114 are both
made by Tibotec Pharmaceuticals, a division of Johnson &Johnson.
The trial of patients in 18 countries offers another weapon for peopleinfected
with drug-resistant forms of the Aids virus about 10% of those not yet treated,
the researchers report in the Lancet medical journal.
This study is one of the most significant worldwide HIV/AIDS clinical
trials in recent years, said Dr William Towner, of Kaiser Permanente
Southern California, who worked on the study. It showed that when the
two drugs are used in combination, there is a good chance HIV can be very
effectively controlled in patients who have advanced, multi-drug resistant
HIV.
TMC125 is in a class of HIV drugs called non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitors or NNRTIs. TMC114, which is now approved and sold under the brand
name Prezista, is a protease inhibitor.
The drugs do not cure the infection but can control what is known as viral load
how much virus is circulating in the body. Higher viral load usually means more
symptoms. Different classes of HIV drugs attack the virus at different stages in
its cycle of infection and replication.Treating a resistant virus with two
active agents has been a mantra in HIV care for quite some time, Towner
said. Adding only one active agent to a patient experiencing drug failure
usually results in the rapid, predictable development of resistance to that
agent. Very seldom do patients get the chance to receive two potent new
investigational agents in one clinical trial.
In the trials, known as Duet 1 and Duet 2, patients who got two drugs instead of
one had better control of the human immunodeficency virus that causes Aids.
Close to 40-million people worldwide are infected with HIV.
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