Abstract
Prison inmates with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection can be difficult to treat because of the complexity and intrusiveness of many combination antiretroviral therapy regimens. NZTA4007, a 24-week open-label, single-arm clinical trial involving 108 antiretroviral therapy-naive, incarcerated, HIV-infected persons, was conducted to evaluate a compact regimen (4 tablets per day) consisting of 1 lamivudine-zidovudine (150 mg/300 mg) combination tablet (COM) and one 300-mg abacavir tablet administered twice daily under directly observed treatment conditions. In the intent-to-treat observed analysis, the plasma HIV type 1 (HIV-1) RNA level remained at ≤400 copies/mL in 85% of the patients and at <50 copies/mL in 75% of the patients. Median change from baseline was -2.41 log10 copies/mL for the HIV-1 RNA level and +111 cells/mm3 for the CD4 cell count. The overall adherence to prescribed doses was 94% for patients who remained enrolled in the study. COM-abacavir given twice daily was generally well tolerated, and adverse events prompted only 4 patients to withdraw from the study.
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CITATION STYLE
Kirkland, L. R., Fischl, M. A., Tashima, K. T., Paar, D., Gensler, T., Graham, N. M., … Hernandez, J. E. (2002). Response to lamivudine-zidovudine plus abacavir twice daily in antiretroviral-naive, incarcerated patients with HIV infection taking directly observed treatment. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 34(4), 511–518. https://doi.org/10.1086/338400
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