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. 2007 Mar;6(1):36-46.
doi: 10.1177/1545109706295946.

Dyslipidemia in an Asian population after treatment for two years with protease inhibitor-containing regimens

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Dyslipidemia in an Asian population after treatment for two years with protease inhibitor-containing regimens

Stephen J Kerr et al. J Int Assoc Physicians AIDS Care (Chic). 2007 Mar.

Abstract

There are limited data about dyslipidemia in Asian patients treated with combination antiretroviral therapy. To assess the relative association of different protease-inhibitor-containing regimens with the degree of dyslipidemia, fasting lipid levels were compared during 110 weeks in 250 nucleoside-experienced but protease-inhibitor-naïve Thai patients beginning treatment with 5 protease-inhibitor-containing regimens. Regimens were (1) stavudine, didanosine, and saquinavir; (2) zidovudine, lamivudine, and saquinavir; (3) zidovudine, lamivudine, and indinavir; (4) zidovudine, lamivudine, and ritonavir-boosted indinavir; and (5) efavirenz and ritonavir-boosted indinavir. Triglyceride levels were available for all patients; total cholesterol and high-densitylipoprotein cholesterol levels were available for patients receiving indinavir. The strongest predictors of dyslipidemia after beginning protease-inhibitor-based therapy were treatment regimen and baseline dyslipidemia. Triglycerides, total cholesterol, and high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol changes from baseline to week 110 were significant in patients taking ritonavir-boosted indinavir. Efavirenz and ritonavir-boosted indinavir were associated with significant high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol increases compared with other regimens. Non-stavudine-containing non-boosted protease-inhibitor-based highly active antiretroviral treatment regimens had the least association with dyslipidemia.

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