Cvetkovic Risto S, Goa Karen L
Adis International Limited, Mairangi Bay, Auckland, New Zealand.
Drugs. 2003;63(8):769-802. doi: 10.2165/00003495-200363080-00004.
Lopinavir is a novel protease inhibitor (PI) developed from ritonavir. Coadministration with low-dose ritonavir significantly improves the pharmacokinetic properties and hence the activity of lopinavir against HIV-1 protease. Coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir was developed for ease of administration and to ensure both drugs are taken together, as part of combination therapy with other antiretroviral agents. Coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir-based regimens provide adequate and durable suppression of viral load and sustained improvements in CD4+ cell counts, as demonstrated in randomised trials in antiretroviral therapy-naive and -experienced adults and children. To date, development of primary resistance to lopinavir/ritonavir has not been observed in 470 antiretroviral therapy-naive patients treated for >48 weeks. The lopinavir/ritonavir-based regimen was more effective than nelfinavir in antiretroviral therapy-naive HIV-1-infected patients in a phase III trial. The coformulation is also effective as 'salvage' therapy, as shown by low cross-resistance rates in patients who failed to respond to treatment with other PIs in phase II trials. Coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir was well tolerated in both antiretroviral therapy-naive and -experienced HIV-1-infected adults and children with low rates of study drug-related treatment discontinuations. The most common adverse event in adults associated with lopinavir/ritonavir was diarrhoea, followed by other gastrointestinal disturbances, asthenia, headache and skin rash. The incidence of moderate-to-severe adverse events in children was low, skin rash being the most common. Changes in body fat composition occurred with equal frequency in lopinavir/ritonavir- and nelfinavir-treated naive patients, through week 60 in a phase III study. Although laboratory abnormalities occurred with similar frequency in both treatment groups, triglycerides grade 3/4 elevations were significantly more frequent with lopinavir/ritonavir. Total cholesterol and triglycerides grade 3/4 elevations appear to occur more frequently in PI-experienced than in PI-naive lopinavir/ritonavir-treated patients. A number of clinically important drug interactions have been reported with lopinavir/ritonavir necessitating dosage adjustments of lopinavir/ritonavir and/or the interacting drugs, and several other drugs are contraindicated in patients receiving the coformulation.
Coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir is a novel PI that, in combination with other antiretroviral agents, suppresses plasma viral load and enhances immunological status in therapy-naive and -experienced patients with HIV-1 infection. Lopinavir/ritonavir appears more effective than nelfinavir in 'naive' patients and is also suitable for 'salvage' therapy, because of its high barrier to development of resistance. Given its clinical efficacy, a tolerability profile in keeping with this class of drugs, favourable resistance profile and easy-to-adhere-to administration regimen, coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir should be regarded as a first-line option when including a PI in the management of HIV-1 infection.
Lopinavir/ritonavir is a coformulation of two structurally related protease inhibitor (PI) antiretroviral agents. Lopinavir is a highly potent and selective inhibitor of the HIV type 1 (HIV-1) protease, an essential enzyme for production of mature, infective virus. It acts by arresting maturation of HIV-1 thereby blocking its infectivity. Thus, the main antiviral action of lopinavir is to prevent subsequent infections of susceptible cells; it has no effect on cells with already integrated viral DNA. Lopinavir has an approximate, equals 10-fold higher in vitro activity against both wild-type and mutant HIV-1 proteases than ritonavir; however, its in vivo activity is greatly attenuated by a high first-pass hepatic metabolism. The low-dose ritonavir coadministered with lopinavir inhibits metabolic inactivation of lopinavir and acts only as its pharmacokinetic enhancer. Therefore, the antiretroviral activity of roviral activity of coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir 400/100mg twice daily is derived solely from lopinavir plasma concentrations. Combining lopinavir with low-dose ritonavir produces lopinavir concentrations far exceeding those needed to suppress 50% of in vitro and in vivo viral replication in CD4+ cells and monocyte/macrophages (main human reservoirs of HIV-1 infection). Thus far, no resistance to lopinavir has been detected in clinical trials in antiretroviral therapy-naive patients treated for up to 204 weeks and only 12% of HIV-1 strains from patients in whom prior treatment with multiple PIs have failed, have been observed to develop resistance to coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir. A strong negative correlation was found between the number of PI mutations at baseline and the viral response rates achieved with lopinavir/ritonavir-based regimens in PI-experienced patients, indicating that resistance to lopinavir increases with increasing number of PI mutations and that five PI mutations represent the clinically relevant genotypic breakpoint for lopinavir.
The absolute bioavailability of lopinavir coformulated with ritonavir in humans has not yet been established. Multiple-dosage absorption pharmacokinetics of lopinavir/ritonavir 400/100mg twice daily (the mean peak [C(max)] and trough [C(trough)] plasma concentrations at steady-state and the 12-hour area under the plasma concentration-time curve [AUC(12)] of either drug) were stable in antiretroviral therapy-naive and single PI-experienced adult patients receiving therapy over a 24-week evaluation period. The C(trough) values of lopinavir, achieved with lopinavir/ritonavir 400/100mg twice daily, were median 84-fold higher than the protein binding-adjusted 50% effective concentration (EC(50)) of lopinavir against wild-type HIV-1 in antiretroviral therapy-naive HIV-1-infected patients in a phase II study. Bioavailability of lopinavir administered in either the capsule or the liquid lopinavir/ritonavir formulation can be increased substantially with concurrent ingestion of food with moderate-to-high fat content. At steady state, lopinavir is approximately 98-99% plasma protein bound and the percentage of its unbound (i.e. pharmacologically active) fraction is dependent on total drug plasma concentration. Both lopinavir and ritonavir penetrate poorly into the human genital tracts and the cerebrospinal fluid. Both agents undergo extensive and rapid first-pass metabolism by hepatic cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4 isoenzyme. However, ritonavir also potently inhibits this enzyme and acts as a pharmacokinetic enhancer of lopinavir. The elimination half-life and apparent oral clearance of lopinavir average approximately 4-6 hours and approximately 6-7 L/h, respectively, with lopinavir/ritonavir 400/100mg twice daily administration. Less than 3% and 20% of the lopinavir dose is excreted unchanged in the urine and faeces, respectively. Limited data show similar pharmacokinetics of lopinavir in children as in adults.
Coformulated lopinavir/ritonavir has the potential to interact with wide variety of drugs via several mechanisms, mostly involving the CYP enzymes. Coadministration of lopinavir/ritonavir is contraindicated with certain drugs (i.e. flecainide, propafenone, astemizole, terfenadine, ergot derivatives, cisapride, pimozide, midazolam and triazolam) that are highly dependent on CYP3A or CYP2D6 for clearance and for which elevated plasma concentrations are associated with serious and/or life-threatening events. Coadministration with lopinavir/ritonavir is also not recommended for drugs or herbal products (i.e. rifampicin [rifampin] and St. John's wort [Hypericum perforatum]) that may substantially reduce lopinavir plasma concentrations, or drugs whose plasma concentrations elevated by the coformulation may lead to serious adverse reactions (i.e. simvastatin and lovastatin). However, a recent study in healthy volunteers suggests that adequate lopinavir concentrations may be achieved during rifampicin coadministration by increasing the twice-daily dosage of lopinavir/ritonavir in conjunction with therapeutic drug monitoring. The liquid (but not the capsule) formulation of lopinavir/ritonavir contains 42.4% ethanol (v/v) and should not be coadministered with drugs capable of producing disulfiram-like reactions (e.g. disulfiram, metronidazole). Coadministration with saquinavir or indinavir requires no dosage adjustment, whereas coadministration with amprenavir, nevirapine or efavirenz requires a dosage increase of the coformulation typically by 33%. As the oral bioavailability of both didanosine and lopinavir/ritonavir is significantly affected by concurrent food ingestion, didanosine should be administered 1 hour before or 2 hours after lopinavir/ritonavir has been taken with food. Interactions between lopinavir/ritonavir and other nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) are not expected. The coformulation is also likely to increase plasma concentrations of non-antiretroviral drugs metabolised through the CYP3A pathway. To reduce the risk of their toxicity when coadministered with lopinavir/ritonavir, the recommended actions include: (i) monitoring of the drug plasma concentration (antiarrhythmics and immunosuppressants) or the international normalised ratio (warfarin); (ii) the use of alternative treatment (atorvastatin) or birth control methods (ethinylestradiol); and (iii) dosage adjustment (clarithromycin [only in patients with renal failure], rifabutin, dihydropyridine calcium-channel blockers, atorvastatin, ketoconazole and itraconazole). (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
洛匹那韦是一种从利托那韦开发而来的新型蛋白酶抑制剂(PI)。与低剂量利托那韦合用可显著改善药代动力学特性,从而增强洛匹那韦对HIV-1蛋白酶的活性。为便于给药并确保两种药物一起服用,开发了洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂,作为与其他抗逆转录病毒药物联合治疗的一部分。随机试验表明,在初治和经治的成人及儿童中,基于洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂的治疗方案能充分且持久地抑制病毒载量,并持续提高CD4+细胞计数。迄今为止,在470例接受治疗超过48周的初治抗逆转录病毒治疗患者中,尚未观察到对洛匹那韦/利托那韦产生原发性耐药。在一项III期试验中,对于初治的HIV-1感染患者,基于洛匹那韦/利托那韦的治疗方案比奈非那韦更有效。在II期试验中,该复方制剂作为“挽救”疗法也有效,在对其他蛋白酶抑制剂治疗无反应的患者中交叉耐药率较低。洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂在初治和经治的HIV-1感染的成人及儿童中耐受性良好,因研究药物导致的治疗中断率较低。在成人中,与洛匹那韦/利托那韦相关的最常见不良事件是腹泻,其次是其他胃肠道不适、乏力、头痛和皮疹。儿童中中度至重度不良事件的发生率较低,皮疹最为常见。在一项III期研究中,至第60周时,在接受洛匹那韦/利托那韦和奈非那韦治疗的初治患者中,身体脂肪成分变化的发生率相同。尽管两个治疗组中实验室异常的发生频率相似,但洛匹那韦/利托那韦治疗组中3/4级甘油三酯升高更为常见。在接受洛匹那韦/利托那韦治疗的有蛋白酶抑制剂治疗史的患者中,总胆固醇和3/4级甘油三酯升高的发生率似乎比无治疗史的患者更高。已报道洛匹那韦/利托那韦与多种药物存在许多具有临床重要性的药物相互作用,这需要调整洛匹那韦/利托那韦和/或相互作用药物的剂量,并且在接受该复方制剂治疗的患者中,其他几种药物是禁忌的。
洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂是一种新型蛋白酶抑制剂,与其他抗逆转录病毒药物联合使用时,可抑制初治和经治的HIV-1感染患者的血浆病毒载量并增强免疫状态。在“初治”患者中,洛匹那韦/利托那韦似乎比奈非那韦更有效,并且由于其耐药性发展的高屏障,也适用于“挽救”疗法。鉴于其临床疗效、与这类药物相符的耐受性、良好的耐药性特征以及易于遵循的给药方案,在将蛋白酶抑制剂纳入HIV-1感染的治疗中时,洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂应被视为一线选择。
洛匹那韦/利托那韦是两种结构相关的蛋白酶抑制剂(PI)抗逆转录病毒药物的复方制剂。洛匹那韦是HIV-1蛋白酶的高效选择性抑制剂,HIV-1蛋白酶是产生成熟感染性病毒所必需的酶。它通过阻止HIV-1的成熟来发挥作用,从而阻断其感染性。因此,洛匹那韦的主要抗病毒作用是防止后续对易感细胞的感染;它对已整合病毒DNA的细胞没有作用。与利托那韦相比,洛匹那韦对野生型和突变型HIV-1蛋白酶的体外活性大约高10倍;然而其体内活性因高首过肝代谢而大大减弱。与洛匹那韦合用的低剂量利托那韦可抑制洛匹那韦的代谢失活,仅作为其药代动力学增强剂。因此,每日两次服用400/100mg洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂的抗逆转录病毒活性仅源于洛匹那韦的血浆浓度。将洛匹那韦与低剂量利托那韦联合使用可产生远远超过抑制CD4+细胞和单核细胞/巨噬细胞(HIV-1感染的主要人体储存库)中50%的体外和体内病毒复制所需浓度的洛匹那韦浓度。迄今为止,在接受治疗长达204周的初治抗逆转录病毒治疗患者的临床试验中,尚未检测到对洛匹那韦的耐药性,并且在先前接受多种蛋白酶抑制剂治疗失败的患者中,仅观察到12%的HIV-1毒株对洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂产生耐药。在有蛋白酶抑制剂治疗史的患者中,基线时蛋白酶抑制剂突变的数量与基于洛匹那韦/利托那韦的治疗方案所实现的病毒反应率之间存在强烈的负相关,这表明对洛匹那韦的耐药性随着蛋白酶抑制剂突变数量的增加而增加,并且五个蛋白酶抑制剂突变代表洛匹那韦的临床相关基因型断点。
洛匹那韦与利托那韦合用在人体中的绝对生物利用度尚未确定。在一项为期24周的评估期内,对于接受治疗的初治抗逆转录病毒治疗成人患者和有单一蛋白酶抑制剂治疗史的成人患者,每日两次服用400/100mg洛匹那韦/利托那韦的多剂量吸收药代动力学(两种药物在稳态时的平均峰浓度[C(max)]和谷浓度[C(trough)]以及血浆浓度-时间曲线下12小时面积[AUC(12)])是稳定的。在一项II期研究中,对于初治的HIV-1感染患者,每日两次服用400/100mg洛匹那韦/利托那韦所达到的洛匹那韦C(trough)值,中位数比针对野生型HIV-1的洛匹那韦经蛋白结合调整后的50%有效浓度(EC(50))高84倍。同时摄入中高脂肪含量的食物可显著提高洛匹那韦胶囊或液体洛匹那韦/利托那韦制剂中洛匹那韦的生物利用度。在稳态时,洛匹那韦约98 - 99%与血浆蛋白结合,其未结合(即药理活性)部分的百分比取决于总药物血浆浓度。洛匹那韦和利托那韦在人体生殖道和脑脊液中的渗透性都很差。两种药物都通过肝细胞色素P450(CYP)3A4同工酶进行广泛而快速的首过代谢。然而,利托那韦也强烈抑制这种酶,并作为洛匹那韦的药代动力学增强剂。每日两次服用400/100mg洛匹那韦/利托那韦时,洛匹那韦的消除半衰期和表观口服清除率平均分别约为4 - 6小时和约6 - 7 L/h。洛匹那韦剂量中分别不到3%和20%以原形经尿液和粪便排泄。有限的数据表明,洛匹那韦在儿童中的药代动力学与成人相似。
洛匹那韦/利托那韦复方制剂有可能通过多种机制与多种药物相互作用,主要涉及CYP酶。洛匹那韦/利托那韦与某些高度依赖CYP3A或CYP2D6进行清除且血浆浓度升高与严重和/或危及生命事件相关的药物(即氟卡尼、普罗帕酮、阿司咪唑、特非那定、麦角衍生物、西沙必利、匹莫齐特、咪达唑仑和三唑仑)合用是禁忌的。也不建议洛匹那韦/利托那韦与可能大幅降低洛匹那韦血浆浓度的药物或草药产品(即利福平[rifampin]和圣约翰草[贯叶连翘])或其血浆浓度因复方制剂而升高可能导致严重不良反应的药物(即辛伐他汀和洛伐他汀)合用。然而,最近在健康志愿者中的一项研究表明,通过增加洛匹那韦/利托那韦的每日两次剂量并结合治疗药物监测,在合用利福平时可能达到足够的洛匹那韦浓度。洛匹那韦/利托那韦的液体制剂(但不是胶囊制剂)含有42.4%乙醇(v/v),不应与能够产生双硫仑样反应的药物(如双硫仑、甲硝唑)合用。与沙奎那韦或茚地那韦合用无需调整剂量,而与安普那韦、奈韦拉平或依非韦伦合用通常需要将复方制剂的剂量增加33%。由于食物同时摄入会显著影响去羟肌苷和洛匹那韦/利托那韦的口服生物利用度,去羟肌苷应在洛匹那韦/利托那韦与食物一起服用前1小时或服用后2小时服用。预计洛匹那韦/利托那韦与其他核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂(NRTIs)之间不会相互作用。该复方制剂也可能会增加通过CYP3A途径代谢的非抗逆转录病毒药物的血浆浓度。为降低与洛匹那韦/利托那韦合用时其毒性风险,推荐的措施包括:(i)监测药物血浆浓度(抗心律失常药和免疫抑制剂)或国际标准化比值(华法林);(ii)使用替代治疗(阿托伐他汀)或避孕方法(炔雌醇);以及(iii)调整剂量(克拉霉素[仅用于肾衰竭患者]、利福布汀、二氢吡啶类钙通道阻滞剂、阿托伐他汀、酮康唑和伊曲康唑)。(摘要截断)