Clinical use, efficacy, and durability of maraviroc for antiretroviral therapy in routine care: A European survey
- PMID: 31751385
- PMCID: PMC6874206
- DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225381
Clinical use, efficacy, and durability of maraviroc for antiretroviral therapy in routine care: A European survey
Abstract
Objectives: The study aimed to survey maraviroc use and assess effectiveness and durability of maraviroc-containing antiretroviral treatment (ART) in routine practice across Europe.
Methods: Data were retrieved from 26 cohorts in 8 countries comprising adults who started maraviroc in 2005-2016 and had ≥1 follow-up visit. Available V3 sequences were re-analysed centrally for tropism determination by geno2pheno[coreceptor]. Treatment failure (TF) was defined as either virological failure (viral load >50 copies/mL) or maraviroc discontinuation for any reason over 48 weeks. Predictors of TF were explored by logistic regression analysis. Time to maraviroc discontinuation was estimated by Kaplan-Meier survival analysis.
Results: At maraviroc initiation (baseline), among 1,381 patients, 67.1% had experienced ≥3 ART classes and 45.6% had a viral load <50 copies/mL. Maraviroc was occasionally added to the existing regimen as a single agent (7.3%) but it was more commonly introduced alongside other new agents, and was often (70.4%) used with protease inhibitors. Accompanying drugs comprised 1 (40.2%), 2 (48.6%) or ≥3 (11.2%) ART classes. Among 1,273 patients with available tropism data, 17.6% showed non-R5 virus. Non-standard maraviroc use also comprised reported once daily dosing (20.0%) and a total daily dose of 150mg (12.1%). Over 48 weeks, 41.4% of patients met the definition of TF, although the 1-year estimated retention on maraviroc was 82.1% (95% confidence interval 79.9-84.2). Among 1,010 subjects on maraviroc at week 48, the viral load was >50 copies/mL in 19.9% and >200 copies/mL in 10.7%. Independent predictors of TF comprised a low nadir CD4 count, a detectable baseline viral load, previous PI experience, non-R5 tropism, having ≥3 active drugs in the accompanying regimen, and a more recent calendar year of maraviroc initiation.
Conclusions: This study reports on the largest observation cohort of patients who started maraviroc across 8 European countries. In this overall highly treatment-experienced population, with a small but appreciable subset that received maraviroc outside of standard treatment guidelines, maraviroc was safe and reasonably effective, with relatively low rates of discontinuation over 48 weeks and only 2 cases of serum transaminase elevations reported as reasons for discontinuation.
Conflict of interest statement
I have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: Dr. Boucher reports personal fees and research grant from ViiV, outside the submitted work. Dr. Geretti reports grants from BMS, grants and personal fees from Gilead Sciences, personal fees from Cepheid, grants and personal fees from Roche Pharma, grants and personal fees from ViiV Healthcare, grants and personal fees from Janssen, outside the submitted work; Dr. Kaiser reports grants from Gilead Sciences and ViiV Healthcare, personal fees from Janssen-Cilag, MSD, ROCHE, ABBVIE, Siemens and ViiV Healthcare, outside the submitted work; Dr. Vandamme received a personal fee from Gilead outside the submitted work; Dr. Zazzi reports grants from Gilead Sciences and ViiV Healthcare, personal fees from Janssen-Cilag and ViiV Healthcare, outside the submitted work; Dr. Incardona reports grants from Gilead Sciences, Janssen and ViiV Healthcare, outside the submitted work; she received salary from InformaPRO, Rome. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
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References
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