Background: For some antiretroviral therapies, drug concentrations are reduced during pregnancy, potentially compromising effective virological suppression. Methods: Data on atazanavir boosted with ritonavir in pregnancy are reviewed. Results: With standard atazanavir/ritonavir 300/100 mg once-daily dosing: atazanavir area-under-the-concentration-time curves were reduced during pregnancy in most studies, but overall interpretation differed according to the data used for comparison; atazanavir concentration 24 h post-dose was maintained >150 ng/ml in 97.6% of women; no instance of mother-to-child transmission occurred in treatment-adherent mothers; and infant hyperbilirubinaemia was not elevated beyond levels expected in the neonatal period. Conclusions: With concurrent medications that reduce atazanavir drug concentrations, optimal therapy during pregnancy may require once-daily atazanavir/ritonavir 400/100 mg; however, using this dose during the third trimester doubled maternal grade 3-4 hyperbilirubinaemia rates. ©2013 International Medical Press.
CITATION STYLE
Eley, T., Bertz, R., Hardy, H., & Burger, D. (2013). Atazanavir pharmacokinetics, efficacyand safety in pregnancy: A systematic review. Antiviral Therapy, 18(3), 361–375. https://doi.org/10.3851/IMP2473
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