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Hiv Medicine | 2005

British HIV Association guidelines for the treatment of HIV-1-infected adults with antiretroviral therapy 2008

B Gazzard; Jane Anderson; Abdel Babiker; Marta Boffito; Gary Brook; Gary Brough; Duncan Churchill; Ben Cromarty; Satyajit Das; Martin Fisher; Andrew Freedman; Anna Maria Geretti; Margaret Johnson; Saye Khoo; Clifford Leen; Devaki Nair; Barry Peters; Andrew N. Phillips; Deenan Pillay; Anton Pozniak; John P. Walsh; Ed Wilkins; Ian S. Williams; Matthew Williams; Mike Youle

This summary document is an update to the full British HIV Association (BHIVA) Treatment Guidelines published in HIV Medicine in July 2005 (Volume 6, Supplement 2). Only the ‘What to start with’ and ‘Treatment-experienced patients’ sections have been completely rewritten. The tables of recommendations (Tables 1–7) have also been updated to include new data. Please refer to the full guidelines for more information.


AIDS | 2006

A randomized comparative trial of tenofovir DF or abacavir as replacement for a thymidine analogue in persons with lipoatrophy

Graeme J. Moyle; Caroline Sabin; Jonathan Cartledge; Margaret Johnson; E Wilkins; Duncan Churchill; P Hay; Ade Fakoya; Maurice Murphy; George Scullard; Clifford Leen; Geraldine Reilly

Background:Long-term antiretroviral therapy, while dramatically reducing HIV-related morbidity and mortality, is associated with metabolic and morphological changes. Peripheral fat loss, lipoatrophy, appears most associated with prolonged therapy with thymidine nucleoside analogues. Methods:A randomized, open-label, comparative study of switching from a thymidine nucleoside analogue to either tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (DF) or abacavir in 105 individuals on successful antiretroviral therapy with clinically evident moderate to severe lipoatrophy. Results:Individuals were randomized to tenofovir DF (52) or abacavir (53). The switch was well tolerated and the majority of patients completed 48 weeks of study. One individual in the tenofovir DF group and three in the abacavir group discontinued due to drug-related adverse events. Both groups similarly maintained virological control. Limb fat mass increased similarly in both groups: mean increases by week 48 of 329 and 483 g in tenofovir DF and abacavir groups, respectively [mean 95% confidence interval for difference, −154.3 (range −492.8 to 184.3)]. This change from baseline was statistically significant in both groups (tenofovir DF, P = 0.01; abacavir, P = 0.0001). Mean total cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides improved modestly with switching to tenofovir DF but were unchanged with abacavir. The changes in these parameters were significantly greater in the tenofovir DF arm relative to abacavir. Conclusions:Switching from a thymidine nucleoside analogue to either tenofovir DF or abacavir leads to significant improvement in limb fat mass over 48 weeks. Tenofovir DF may have modest advantages over abacavir for changes in lipids. Peripheral lipoatrophy, when clinically apparent, resolves slowly following treatment switching.


BMJ | 2011

Impact of late diagnosis and treatment on life expectancy in people with HIV-1: UK Collaborative HIV Cohort (UK CHIC) Study

Margaret T May; Mark Gompels; Valerie Delpech; Kholoud Porter; Frank Post; Margaret Johnson; David Dunn; Adrian Palfreeman; Richard Gilson; Brian Gazzard; Teresa Hill; John Walsh; Martin Fisher; Chloe Orkin; Jonathan Ainsworth; Loveleen Bansi; Andrew Phillips; Clifford Leen; Mark Nelson; Jane Anderson; Caroline Sabin

Objectives To estimate life expectancy for people with HIV undergoing treatment compared with life expectancy in the general population and to assess the impact on life expectancy of late treatment, defined as CD4 count <200 cells/mm3 at start of antiretroviral therapy. Design Cohort study. Setting Outpatient HIV clinics throughout the United Kingdom. Population Adult patients from the UK Collaborative HIV Cohort (UK CHIC) Study with CD4 count ≤350 cells/mm3 at start of antiretroviral therapy in 1996-2008. Main outcome measures Life expectancy at the exact age of 20 (the average additional years that will be lived by a person after age 20), according to the cross sectional age specific mortality rates during the study period. Results 1248 of 17 661 eligible patients died during 91 203 person years’ follow-up. Life expectancy (standard error) at exact age 20 increased from 30.0 (1.2) to 45.8 (1.7) years from 1996-9 to 2006-8. Life expectancy was 39.5 (0.45) for male patients and 50.2 (0.45) years for female patients compared with 57.8 and 61.6 years for men and women in the general population (1996-2006). Starting antiretroviral therapy later than guidelines suggest resulted in up to 15 years’ loss of life: at age 20, life expectancy was 37.9 (1.3), 41.0 (2.2), and 53.4 (1.2) years in those starting antiretroviral therapy with CD4 count <100, 100-199, and 200-350 cells/mm3, respectively. Conclusions Life expectancy in people treated for HIV infection has increased by over 15 years during 1996-2008, but is still about 13 years less than that of the UK population. The higher life expectancy in women is magnified in those with HIV. Earlier diagnosis and subsequent timely treatment with antiretroviral therapy might increase life expectancy.


Hiv Medicine | 2016

British HIV Association guidelines for the treatment of HIV-1-positive adults with antiretroviral therapy 2015

Duncan Churchill; Laura Waters; Nadia Ahmed; Brian Angus; Marta Boffito; Mark Bower; David Dunn; Simon Edwards; Carol Emerson; Sarah Fidler; Martin Fisher; Rob Horne; Saye Khoo; Clifford Leen; Nicola Mackie; Neal Marshall; Fernando Monteiro; Mark L. Nelson; Chloe Orkin; Adrian Palfreeman; Sarah Pett; Andrew N. Phillips; Frank Post; Anton Pozniak; Iain Reeves; Caroline Sabin; Roy Trevelion; John Walsh; Ed Wilkins; Ian S. Williams

Writing Group Duncan Churchill, Chair, Royal Sussex County Hospital, Brighton, UK Laura Waters, Vice Chair, Mortimer Market Centre, London, UK Nadia Ahmed, Mortimer Market Centre, London, UK Brian Angus, University of Oxford, UK Marta Boffito, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, UK Mark Bower, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, UK David Dunn, University College London, UK Simon Edwards, Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, UK Carol Emerson, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast, UK Sarah Fidler, Imperial College School of Medicine at St Mary’s, London, UK †Martin Fisher, Royal Sussex County Hospital, Brighton, UK Rob Horne, University College London, UK Saye Khoo, University of Liverpool, UK Clifford Leen, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, UK Nicola Mackie, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, UK Neal Marshall, Royal Free Hospital NHS Trust, London, UK Fernando Monteiro, UK-CAB Mark Nelson, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007

Efficacy and Safety of Atazanavir-Based Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Patients with Virologic Suppression Switched from a Stable, Boosted or Unboosted Protease Inhibitor Treatment Regimen: The SWAN Study (AI424-097) 48-Week Results

José M. Gatell; Dominique Salmon Ceron; Adriano Lazzarin; Eric Van Wijngaerden; Francisco Antunes; Clifford Leen; Andrzej Horban; Victoria Wirtz; Linda Odeshoo; Monique Van den Dungen; Claudia Gruber; Emilio Ledesma

BACKGROUND Atazanavir is a once-daily protease inhibitor (PI) for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection that has previously been studied in cohorts of treatment-naive and treatment-experienced patients. Limited data are available on the usefulness of switching from a PI-based regimen to a regimen based on a different PI, such as atazanavir, in HIV-infected patients experiencing virologic suppression but seeking regimen simplification. METHODS The Switch to Another Protease Inhibitor (SWAN) study was a 48-week, open-label trial involving HIV-positive patients with virologic suppression who were receiving stable PI-based regimens (with or without ritonavir). Patients were randomized 2 : 1 to switch to atazanavir (400 mg per day)--or, if they were receiving tenofovir, to atazanavir-ritonavir (300/100 mg per day)--or to continue to receive their existing PI. The proportion of patients who experienced virologic rebound (defined as an HIV RNA load >or=50 copies/mL) was compared through study week 48. RESULTS Patients either received an atazanavir-containing regimen (278 patients) or continued to receive a comparator PI-containing regimen (141 patients). The proportion of patients who experienced virologic rebound was significantly lower among those who switched to an atazanavir-containing regimen (19 [7%] of 278) than it was among those who continued to receive a comparator PI regimen (22 [16%] of 141; P=.004). Patients who switched to atazanavir therapy experienced significantly fewer total cholesterol, fasting triglyceride, and non-high density lipoprotein cholesterol elevations than did patients in the comparator PI group (P<.001); patients receiving atazanavir had comparable rates of adverse event-related discontinuation and serious adverse events. CONCLUSIONS In patients with virologic suppression who were receiving other PIs, switching to a once-per-day regimen containing atazanavir provided better maintenance of virologic suppression (as demonstrated by significantly lower rates of virologic rebound and treatment failure than those observed with continued unmodified therapy), a comparable safety profile, and improved lipid parameters, compared with those for patients who continued their prior PI-based regimen through 48 weeks.


Journal of Infection | 1999

Consensus statement on diagnosis, investigation, treatment and prevention of acute bacterial meningitis in immunocompetent adults

N Begg; K A Cartwright; J Cohen; E B Kaczmarski; J A Innes; Clifford Leen; D Nathwani; Michael Singer; L Southgate; W T Todd; P D Welsby; M J Wood

Bacterial meningitis in adults (those aged over 15 years) is an uncommon but serious condition. The principles of prevention and treatment are easy to state but, unlike recommendations in guidelines for other conditions, the evidence base for many of our recommendations is lacking or a subject of controversy. The British Infection Society therefore convened a working party comprising clinicians, microbiologists, epidemiologists, general practitioner (GP) and Public Health representatives to assess current evidence and issue a clinically based consensus paper on the management of adult patients with suspected bacterial meningitis which would be useful for non-specialist physicians. The Working Party was aware that they had to make several recommendations using incomplete evidence. evidence from childhood meningitis, or from animal models. The grading of levels of evidence, adapted from AHCPR 1992 ’ . is given in Table I and the grading for our recommendations in Table II. We have included management of septicaemic presentations of meningococcal infection although such patients may not have meningitis. Adults with a meningitic presentation of meningococcal sepsis may have had a relatively mild bacteraemic phase and have a mortality rate of 5% or less whereas those who present with meningococcal septicaemia or sepsis unaccompanied by meningitis may have a mortality rate of 15-40% We have not included advice on management of meningitis following trauma or neurosurgery (except for recommendations for antibiotic treatment of pneumococcal meningitis).


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2012

UK consensus guidelines for the use of the protease inhibitors boceprevir and telaprevir in genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C infected patients

A Fraser; Kosh Agarwal; A. Austin; Ashley Brown; Graham R. Foster; R. Fox; Peter C. Hayes; Clifford Leen; Peter R. Mills; David Mutimer; Sd Ryder; John F. Dillon

The nonstructural 3 serine protease inhibitors (PIs), boceprevir and telaprevir, represent the first in a new generation of directly acting antivirals against genotype 1 hepatitis C (HCV) infection. When used in combination with pegylated interferon and ribavirin, these drugs greatly improve sustained virological response rates in both treatment‐naïve patients and patients who have had previous virological failure on treatment. However, the addition of these new agents will increase the complexity of therapeutic regimens, the rates of side‐effects and costs.


Hiv Medicine | 2010

British HIV Association guidelines for the management of coinfection with HIV-1 and hepatitis B or C virus 2010

G Brook; J Main; Mark Nelson; Sanjay Bhagani; E Wilkins; Clifford Leen; Martin Fisher; Y Gilleece; Richard Gilson; Andrew Freedman; Ranjababu Kulasegaram; Kosh Agarwal; Caroline Sabin; C Deacon-Adams

Table of


AIDS | 2007

Rate of AIDS diseases or death in HIV-infected antiretroviral therapy-naive individuals with high CD4 cell count.

An Phillips; B Gazzard; Richard Gilson; Philippa Easterbrook; M Johnson; John P. Walsh; Clifford Leen; Martin Fisher; Chloe Orkin; Jane Anderson; Pillay D; Delpech; Ca Sabin; Achim Schwenk; David Dunn; Mark Gompels; Teresa Hill; Kholoud Porter; A Babiker

Objective:To assess the absolute rate of AIDS and death in antiretroviral therapy (ART)-naive patients with a high CD4 cell count. Such information would be helpful in the design of a trial investigating early initiation of ART. Design:Analysis of data from an ongoing HIV cohort study. Methods:The rate of (severe) AIDS or death and death alone was evaluated in ART-naive patients according to the current CD4 cell count, focusing on CD4 cell counts ≥ 350 cells/μl among patients in the UK CHIC Study. Results:In a total of 30 313 person-years of follow-up, there were 1557 AIDS or death events. The rate of AIDS or death in persons with most recent CD4 cell count 350–499, 500–649 and > 650 cells/μl was 2.49, 1.54 and 0.96 per 100 person-years, respectively. The rate ratio for those with CD4 cell count 500–649 cells/μl compared with those with CD4 cell count ≥ 650 cells/μl was 1.55 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.11–2.17; P = 0.01]. In a Poisson regression model based on person years with CD4 cell count ≥ 350 cells/μl, there was a strong effect of CD4 cell count on rate of AIDS or death (rate ratio, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.76–0.93; P = 0.001), independent of viral load and age. Conclusions:The trend of decreasing rate of AIDS and death with higher CD4 cell count is present throughout the CD4 cell count ≥ 350 cells/μl range in ART-naive people.


The Lancet | 2007

Risk of extensive virological failure to the three original antiretroviral drug classes over long-term follow-up from the start of therapy in patients with HIV infection: an observational cohort study.

Andrew N. Phillips; Clifford Leen; Alan Wilson; Jane Anderson; David Dunn; Achim Schwenk; Chloe Orkin; Teresa Hill; Martin Fisher; John Walsh; Deenan Pillay; Loveleen Bansi; Brian Gazzard; Philippa Easterbrook; Richard Gilson; Margaret Johnson; Caroline Sabin

BACKGROUND The long-term durability of viral-load suppression provided by the three original antiretroviral drugs is not well characterised. We estimated the proportion of patients who had extensive triple-class failure during long-term follow-up and examined characteristics associated with an increased rate of failure. METHODS 7916 patients who started antiretroviral therapy with three or more drugs were followed up from the time that therapy started until the last viral-load measure. Extensive triple-class virological failure was defined by failure of three subclasses of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, and a ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor. FINDINGS 167 patients developed extensive triple-class failure during 27 441 person-years of follow-up. The Kaplan-Meier estimate for the cumulative risk of extensive triple-class failure was 9.2% by 10 years (95% CI 5.0-13.4). There was evidence that this rate has decreased over time (adjusted hazard ratio 0.86 [0.77-0.96] per year more recent; p=0.006). Of the 167 patients with extensive triple-class failure, 101 (60%) subsequently had at least one viral load less than 50 copies per mL. The risk of death by 5 years from the time of extensive triple-class failure was 10.6% (2.4-18.8, nine deaths). INTERPRETATION We have shown that extensive virological failure of the three main classes of drugs occurs slowly in routine clinical practice. This finding has implications for the planning of treatment programmes in developing countries, where additional drugs outside these classes are unlikely to be available for some time.

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Richard Gilson

University College London

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Chloe Orkin

Queen Mary University of London

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Martin Fisher

Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust

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Margaret Johnson

Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust

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Teresa Hill

University College London

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Loveleen Bansi

University College London

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