Clinical features and risk factors for atazanavir (ATV)-associated urolithiasis: A case-control study

15Citations
Citations of this article
22Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Objectives: Clinical features and risk factors for atazanavir (ATV)-associated urolithiasis have not been fully investigated. Methods: We reviewed all cases of ATV-containing urolithiasis identified by infrared spectrophotometry among HIV-infected patients over a 5-year period to describe their clinical features and outcome. A case-control study was performed to identify risk factors associated with ATV-associated urolithiasis using univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses. Results: 30 cases of ATV-associated urolithiasis were analyzed. Patients were mostly men (87%), median age: 45.5 years, median CD4 cell count: 443 cells/μL and 97% had plasma HIV RNA level <50 cp/mL. Median time between the initiation of ATV-containing regimen and the diagnosis of urolithiasis was 3.1 years. Patients presented with flank pain in 90% and macroscopic hematuria in 82.6%, 34% had renal dysfunction and 44.8% needed ureteroscopic treatment. In univariate analysis, chronic hepatitis C, a history of urolithiasis, prior use of indinavir, ATV duration, undetectable plasma HIV RNA, use of ritonavir as a booster and serum free bilirubin level were associated with ATV-urolithiasis. Multivariate models retained serum free bilirubin level (OR: 2.31 p<0.02) and either ATV duration (OR: = 1.42, p =<0.03) or a history of urolithiasis (OR = 4.79, p<0.02) when adjusting on serum free bilirubin level as risk factors associated with urolithiasis. Conclusions: ATV-containing urolithiasis are associated with frank clinical symptoms and may require surgical intervention. A high serum bilirubin level, a long exposure to ATV and a history of urolithiasis are risk factors for this rare adverse event.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Lafaurie, M., De Sousa, B., Ponscarme, D., Lapidus, N., Daudon, M., Weiss, L., … Molina, J. M. (2014). Clinical features and risk factors for atazanavir (ATV)-associated urolithiasis: A case-control study. PLoS ONE, 9(11). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112836

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free