Affiliation:
1. Microbial Ecology Laboratory (MIEL), CNAM, Paris, France
Abstract
Background:
Cotrimoxazole is the main antibiotic used in HIV-infected patients for
the prophylaxis of opportunistic infections. This antibiotic is prescribed in patients receiving
antiretroviral agents (ART) such as Atazanavir (ATV), a protease inhibitor used with other ART
classes.
:
The objective of this study was to compare HIV treatment failure (HIVTF) in HIV-infected patients
treated concomitantly with ATV and cotrimoxazole to those of patients treated only with
ATV.
Materials and Methods:
This is a comparative analysis of the safety data of HIVTF available with
ATV in the WHO International Pharmacovigilance database "VigiBase®". We used the SMQ
(Standardized MedDRA Querie) to identify all the terms corresponding to HIVTF. We presented
results as a percentage or an adjusted Reporting Odds Ratio (aROR) with a 95% confidence interval
(95% CI).
Results:
A total of 116 cases of HIVTF (2.2%) were reported with ATV among the 5196 individual
case safety reports (ICSR) included in the analysis. The proportion of HIV-infected patients
who presented ATV treatment failure (ATVTF) was lower (2.6%, 3/116) when cotrimoxazole was
concomitant (aROR was 0.5 with a 95%CI from 0.2 to 1.7). Only 10 of 273 ICSRs (3.7%) were
reported from Africa concerning the use of cotrimoxazole prophylaxis concomitantly with ATV.
Conclusion:
This study did not show a higher occurrence of ATVTF when cotrimoxazole was
concomitant. These results reinforce the place of concomitant use of ATV with cotrimoxazole in
the management of HIV treatment.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Pharmacology,Molecular Medicine,General Medicine