Efavirenz concentrations in CSF exceed IC50 for wild-type HIV

HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders remain common despite use of potent antiretroviral therapy (ART). Ongoing viral replication due to poor distribution of antivirals into the CNS may increase risk for HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders. This study's objective was to determine penetrat...

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Published inJournal of antimicrobial chemotherapy Vol. 66; no. 2; pp. 354 - 357
Main Authors Best, B. M., Koopmans, P. P., Letendre, S. L., Capparelli, E. V., Rossi, S. S., Clifford, D. B., Collier, A. C., Gelman, B. B., Mbeo, G., McCutchan, J. A., Simpson, D. M., Haubrich, R., Ellis, R., Grant, I., Ellis, R. J., Marcotte, T. D., Franklin, D., Alexander, T., Letendre, S., Capparelli, E., Heaton, R. K., Atkinson, J. H., Woods, S. P., Dawson, M., Wong, J. K., Fennema-Notestine, C., Taylor, M. J., Theilmann, R., Gamst, A. C., Cushman, C., Abramson, I., Vaida, F., von Jaeger, R., McArthur, J., Smith, M., Morgello, S., Simpson, D., Mintz, L., Toperoff, W., Collier, A., Marra, C., Jones, T., Gelman, B., Head, E., Clifford, D., Al-Lozi, M., Teshome, M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Oxford University Press 01.02.2011
Subjects
Age
CNS
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Summary:HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders remain common despite use of potent antiretroviral therapy (ART). Ongoing viral replication due to poor distribution of antivirals into the CNS may increase risk for HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders. This study's objective was to determine penetration of a commonly prescribed antiretroviral drug, efavirenz, into CSF. CHARTER is an ongoing, North American, multicentre, observational study to determine the effects of ART on HIV-associated neurological disease. Single random plasma and CSF samples were drawn within 1 h of each other from subjects taking efavirenz between September 2003 and July 2007. Samples were assayed by HPLC or HPLC/mass spectrometry with detection limits of 39 ng/mL (plasma) and <0.1 ng/mL (CSF). Eighty participants (age 44 ± 8 years; 79 ± 15 kg; 20 females) had samples drawn 12.5 ± 5.4 h post-dose. The median efavirenz concentrations after a median of 7 months [interquartile range (IQR) 2-17] of therapy were 2145 ng/mL in plasma (IQR 1384-4423) and 13.9 ng/mL in CSF (IQR 4.1-21.2). The CSF/plasma concentration ratio from paired samples drawn within 1 h of each other was 0.005 (IQR 0.0026-0.0076; n = 69). The CSF/IC(50) ratio was 26 (IQR 8-41) using the published IC(50) for wild-type HIV (0.51 ng/mL). Two CSF samples had concentrations below the efavirenz IC(50) for wild-type HIV. Efavirenz concentrations in the CSF are only 0.5% of plasma concentrations but exceed the wild-type IC(50) in nearly all individuals. Since CSF drug concentrations reflect those in brain interstitial fluids, efavirenz reaches therapeutic concentrations in brain tissue.
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CHARTER Group members are listed in the Acknowledgements section.
ISSN:0305-7453
1460-2091
1460-2091
DOI:10.1093/jac/dkq434