Pregnancy-related effects on lamivudine pharmacokinetics in a population study with 228 women

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to describe lamivudine (3TC) pharmacokinetics (PK) in HIV-infected nonpregnant and pregnant women and their fetuses. Samples were collected according to therapeutic drug monitoring from 228 women treated with lamivudine and retrospectively analyzed by a population approach. The samples were also collected from cord blood and amniotic fluid at birth. Lamivudine pharmacokinetics were ascribed to an open two-compartment model with linear absorption and elimination. Mean population parameter estimates (intersubject variability) for women were an absorption rate constant of 1.04 h-1, an elimination clearance rate of 23.6 (0.266) liters · h-1, a central volume of distribution of 109 (0.897) liters, an intercompartmental clearance rate of 6.7 liters/h, and a peripheral volume of distribution of 129 liters. A fetal compartment was linked to maternal circulation by mother-to-cord (or fetus) and cord-to-mother rate constants of 0.463 h-1 and 0.538 h-1, respectively. The amniotic fluid compartment was connected to the fetal compartment with an elimination rate constant of 0.163 h-1 and a fixed-constant swallowing flow. The placental transfer expressed as fetal-to-maternal area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) ratio was 0.86, and the lamivudine amniotic fluid accumulation, expressed as the amniotic fluid-to-fetal AUC ratio, was 2.9. Pregnant women had a 22% higher apparent clearance than nonpregnant and parturient women; however, this increase did not lead to subexposure and should not require a dosage adjustment. Copyright © 2012, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

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Benaboud, S., Tréluyer, J. M., Urien, S., Blanche, S., Bouazza, N., Chappuy, H., … Hirt, D. (2012). Pregnancy-related effects on lamivudine pharmacokinetics in a population study with 228 women. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 56(2), 776–782. https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.00370-11

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