Jody Lawrence
University of California, San Francisco
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Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2009
Polina German; Sunil Parikh; Jody Lawrence; Grant Dorsey; Philip J. Rosenthal; Diane V. Havlir; Edwin D. Charlebois; Warunee Hanpithakpong; Niklas Lindegardh; Francesca T. Aweeka
Objectives:Antimalarial combination therapy is used in persons with HIV infection in the absence of data on drug interactions. The objective of this study was to investigate the pharmacokinetics (PK) of antimalarial combination artemether/lumefantrine (AL) when administered with the protease inhibitor combination lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) in HIV-uninfected healthy volunteers to determine if important drug interactions exist between these agents. Design:Open-label study in healthy HIV-seronegative adults. Methods:Participants received standard 6-dose treatment courses of AL 80/480 mg twice daily on days 1-4 and 28-31. LPV/r 400/100 mg twice daily was administered on days 16-41 after a 2-week washout period. Plasma concentrations of AL, dihydroartemisinin (DHA, artemether metabolite), lopinavir, and ritonavir were measured. Results:PK of lumefantrine was influenced by LPV/r resulting in 2- to 3-fold increases in area under the curve (AUC) (AUC0-264: 413 versus 931 h·μg·mL−1; AUC0-inf: 456 versus 1073 h·μg·mL−1). For artemether, trends toward Cmax and AUC decreases (Cmax 14.3 versus 11.2 ng/mL and 42.7-62.0 versus 25.9-40.5 h·ng·mL−1 for AUC) were noted during coadministration. For DHA, decreases in Cmax (58.8 versus 37.3 ng/mL) and AUC (190-198 versus 104-109 h·ng·mL−1) were observed during coadministration without changes in DHA:artemether AUC ratios. AL did not affect LPV/r PK. Conclusions:Coadministration of artmether/lumefantrine and LPV/r can be carried out for patients coinfected with malaria and HIV. Formal safety analysis of concomitant therapy should be addressed by future studies among individuals living in malaria-endemic regions.
AIDS | 1999
Jonathan M. Schapiro; Mark A. Winters; Jody Lawrence; Thomas C. Merigan
OBJECTIVES To determine the clinical efficacy of the HIV-1 protease inhibitor indinavir (IDV) in saquinavir (SQV)-experienced patients and delineate the developing drug-resistance patterns. DESIGN Open-label prospective clinical trial. SETTING University hospital research center. PATIENTS Ten patients who had completed a SQV monotherapy study in which they had received SQV at a dose of 3600 or 7200 mg daily (two and fourfold the standard dose). INTERVENTIONS At enrollment patients received IDV for 4 weeks as monotherapy, after which zidovudine (ZDV) and lamivudine (3TC) were added to their drug regimen. Patients then received combination therapy (IDV-ZDV-3TC) for an additional 20 weeks to complete a total of 24 weeks of therapy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Plasma HIV RNA viral load and CD4+ T-cell counts were monitored. Sequencing of the HIV protease gene was performed to determine the development of resistance mutations. Plasma samples for sequencing were taken before initial SQV therapy, after SQV therapy before starting IDV, and after 24 weeks of IDV therapy. RESULTS The average duration of high-dose SQV before starting IDV was 58+/-29.2 weeks. A 0.58 log10 RNA copies/ml increase was noted during the 3-week washout phase followed by a mean reduction in plasma HIV RNA viral load of 1.2 log10 RNA copies/ml after 4 weeks of IDV. After the addition of ZDV and 3TC at week 4, HIV RNA continued to fall reaching a mean reduction of 1.96 log10 RNA copies/ml at week 24. Plasma HIV RNA was below 400 RNA copies/ml in six out of nine patients at week 24. CD4+ T-cell counts showed a gradual rise from 328 x 10(6)/l to 453 x 10(6)/l by week 24. SQV therapy had resulted in multiple mutations in the protease gene. Six of the patients had developed five or more mutations: L90M in two, G48V in four (of which three also contained L101), and V82A in three. Patients in whom plasma HIV RNA was not durably suppressed by subsequent IDV combination therapy developed multiple (up to four) additional mutations within 24 weeks, including codons 54, 82 and 93 amongst others. No clear correlation was found between the mutations that had developed in individual patients after SQV and the subsequent efficacy of IDV. CONCLUSION Prolonged use of SQV at potent doses in the presence of elevated viral load levels resulted in the development of multiple resistance mutations. Individual resistance patterns varied greatly between patients, as did their virological response to therapy. Resistance assays may be useful in identifying which patients will benefit from salvage therapy with a second protease inhibitor.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2006
J. Michael Kilby; R. Pat Bucy; Donna Mildvan; Margaret A. Fischl; Jorge Santana-Bagur; Jeff rey L Lennox; Christopher D. Pilcher; Andrew R. Zolopa; Jody Lawrence; Richard B. Pollard; Raphaelle El Habib; David Sahner; Lawrence Fox; Evgenia Aga; Ronald J. Bosch; Ronald T. Mitsuyasu
Strategies to limit life-long dependence on antiretroviral therapy (ART) are needed. We randomized 81 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected subjects to 4 interventional arms involving continued ART plus ALVAC vCP1452 (or placebo) with or without interleukin (IL)-2 infusions. Viral load rebound 12 weeks after ART interruption was then analyzed to assess immune control. Fifty-two subjects reached the study end point. ALVAC recipients had 0.5 log(10) lower virologic rebounds (P=.033). IL-2 plus vaccine boosted CD4(+) T cell counts (P<.001) but did not diminish viral rebound. Significant changes were not detected for HIV-specific lymphoproliferative responses in any arm. This exploratory protocol provides useful clinical data for future therapeutic immunization trial design.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999
Jody Lawrence; Jonathan M. Schapiro; Mark A. Winters; Jose G. Montoya; Andrew R. Zolopa; R. Pesano; Bradley Efron; Dean L. Winslow; Thomas C. Merigan
The efficacy of sequential protease inhibitor therapy was studied in 16 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) 1-infected persons in whom saquinavir with multiple nucleoside reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors (NRTI) had failed. Nelfinavir plus two NRTIs (new or continued) resulted in minimal (0.59 log RNA copies/mL) and transient (8 weeks) suppression of plasma HIV RNA levels. Rapid failure was surprisingly associated with baseline presence of protease gene mutation L90M (P=.04) in the absence of D30N and with RT mutations D67N (P<.01), K70R/S (P=.02), and K219Q/W/R/E (P<.01). Ten patients were subsequently switched to indinavir plus nevirapine and 2 NRTIs, resulting in a median 1.62 log reduction in plasma HIV RNA, with 3 patients maintaining 400 copies/mL for 24 weeks. These results suggest that nelfinavir may have limited utility after saquinavir failure, particularly without potent concomitant therapy. Combining an NRTI with a new protease inhibitor for rescue may improve response.
Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2008
Sharon Mannheimer; Lisa Thackeray; K Huppler Hullsiek; Margaret A. Chesney; Edward M. Gardner; Albert W. Wu; Edward E. Telzak; Jody Lawrence; John D. Baxter; Gerald Friedland
Abstract A randomised trial compared two instruments for assessing self-reported adherence to antiretroviral medications: (1) a day-by-day recall instrument that elicited the number of missed doses in each of the prior three days (3-day instrument; n=64) and (2) a general recall instrument that elicited an estimate of proportion of pills taken during the prior seven days (7-day instrument; n=70). Adherence was measured at study visits over 12 months among participants in a clinical trial assessing treatment strategies for individuals with virologic failure and multidrug-resistant HIV. Participants had a median (interquartile range) of 133 (41–264) CD4 cells/ml3 and a median of 10 major HIV resistance mutations at baseline. Mean adherence levels were 90–98% throughout the study. There was a greater trend in the likelihood of 100% adherence when measured by the 3-day versus the 7-day instrument (odds ratio (OR)=1.45; p=0.06). The likelihood of consistent 100% adherence measured by either instrument decreased over time (p<0.001). Participants reporting 100% adherence at more than half of study visits had better virologic and immunologic outcomes at month-12 compared to those reporting 100% adherence at half or fewer visits (HIV RNA decline of 0.96 versus 0.51 log, respectively, p=0.02; and CD4 cell increase of 51.0 versus 17.8 cells, p=0.04). This study demonstrated the utility of the general 7-day recall adherence self-report instrument as well as the 3-day day-by-day recall adherence self-report instrument for measuring antiretroviral adherence. Self-reported adherence was significantly associated with virologic and immunologic outcomes in this population with advanced drug-resistant HIV disease.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2006
Jody Lawrence; Katherine Huppler Hullsiek; Lisa Thackeray; Donald I. Abrams; Lawrence R. Crane; Douglas L. Mayers; Michael C. Jones; Jennifer M. Saldanha; Barry Schmetter; John D. Baxter
Background:We report the final results of Community Programs for Clinical Research on AIDS (CPCRA-064) study, a multicenter, prospective, randomized, controlled trial that determines the long-term clinical impact of structured treatment interruption (STI) in patients with multidrug-resistant (MDR) HIV-1. Methods and Results:Two hundred seventy-four patients on stable antiretroviral therapy with MDR HIV-1 treatment failure were randomized to a 4-month STI, followed by an optimized antiretroviral regimen (STI arm, n = 140) or an immediate change to an optimized antiretroviral regimen (control arm, n = 134). Main outcome measures were progression of disease or death and changes from baseline in HIV RNA levels (log copies/mL) and CD4 cell counts (cells/mm3). The median baseline HIV RNA level was 5.0 log copies/mL, the median CD4 count was 147 cells/mm3, and the nadir CD4 count was 32 cells/mm3. The median follow-up was 37 months. After the STI period, there were no differences in HIV RNA level responses between treatment arms. Differences in CD4 count responses always favored the control arm, with an advantage of 84 cells from 0 to 4 months (P < 0.0001), 50 cells from 4 to 12 months (P < 0.0001), 45 cells from 12 to 24 months (P = 0.006), and 43 cells after 24 months (P = 0.07). Rates in the STI and control arms for first progression-of-disease event or death were 17.5 and 14.3, respectively (hazard ratio = 1.28; P = 0.22). Conclusion:STI before changing regimens in patients with MDR HIV-1 treatment failure has a prolonged negative impact on CD4 cell count recovery and does not confer progression of disease or virologic benefits.
AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2000
Clive M. Gray; Jody Lawrence; Erik A. Ranheim; Mark A. Vierra; Mary Zupancic; Mark A. Winters; John D. Altman; Jose G. Montoya; Andrew R. Zolopa; Jonathan M. Schapiro; Ashley T. Haase; Thomas C. Merigan
This study examines sequential lymph nodes from 13 drug-naive patients before and after 24 weeks of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). A multipronged approach was used to study changes in HIV-1 RNA in each paired lymph node in relation to tissue architecture and frequency of naive T cells. After 24 weeks, all patients showed significant suppression of plasma viral load and 12 of 13 showed concordant viral suppression in the lymph node (p = 0.001). Using in situ hybridization and quantitative image analysis, we showed that HIV-1 RNA was reduced to below detectable levels (two copies per cell) in follicular dendritic cell (FDC) and mononuclear cell pools. Independent immunohistochemical analysis of lymph node sections revealed that 5 of 13 patients displayed increased FDC networks and 6 of 13 showed no change and all patients showed increases in tissue-resident CD4+ cells. All lymph node biopsies at 24 weeks showed increased proportions of CD4+ and CD8+ cells coexpressing the naive markers CD45RA and CD62L when compared with baseline values. Significant correlations existed between viral load suppression and loss of activated CD8+ T cells after 24 weeks in both lymph node and blood, which was mirrored by significantly lowered frequencies of activated peripheral Gag peptide/MHC tetramer+ CD8+ cells. Overall, these data show that a potent and successful treatment strategy that significantly suppresses and removes FDC-resident HIV-1 results in improvements in lymphoid architecture and by so doing provides the structures available for increased numbers of naive cells to interact with cognate antigen. In addition, our article shows that suppression of HIV-1 replication results in diminished frequencies of peripherally activated antigen-specific CD8+ cells.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999
Jonathan M. Schapiro; Jody Lawrence; Roberto Speck; Mark A. Winters; Bradley Efron; Robert W. Coombs; Ann C. Collier; Thomas C. Merigan
The relationships among treatment regimens, plasma human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) RNA levels, and resistance mutations to saquinavir (codons 48 and 90) and zidovudine (codon 215) were examined in a cohort of 144 patients from the AIDS Clinical Trials Group 229 study. After 24-40 weeks of therapy, no patients who had received the two-drug combination (zidovudine plus saquinavir) had only codon 48 mutations, 45.8% had only codon 90 mutations, and 8.3% had both codon 48 and 90 mutations. Mutations developed by patients who had received the three-drug combination (zidovudine and zalcitabine plus saquinavir) were codon 48 alone in 1.4%, codon 90 alone in 33.3%, and both codons 48 and 90 in 4.2%. The difference between the groups showed a trend toward reduced mutations with three versus two drugs but did not reach significance (P=.11, two-sided chi2). Higher baseline HIV RNA levels correlated with the development of protease mutations. Mutations at codon 215 were present in 82% of all patients at baseline and in 87% after therapy.
Hiv Medicine | 2009
Paige L. Williams; Julia Wu; Susan E. Cohn; Susan L. Koletar; J. A. McCutchan; Robert L. Murphy; Judith S. Currier; Bev Putnam; Graham Ray; Harold A. Kessler; Oluwatoyin Adeyemi; Susan Cahill; Julie Hoffman; Robert A. Salata; Patricia Galloway; Mary M. Payne; Jody Lawrence; Jane Reid; Tammy O'Hara; Jane L. Norris; Sandra Valle; Kathleen E. Squires; Kathy Watson; Charlotte Mills; Charlene Gaca; Timothy Cooley; Mallory D. Witt; Sadia Shaik; Janet Forcht; Charles Gonzales
The aim of the study was to evaluate long‐term changes in lipids and to assess other coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors in highly experienced AIDS patients with immune reconstitution, and to examine their association with antiretroviral therapy (ART).
PLOS ONE | 2011
Agnes Paquet; John D. Baxter; Jodi Weidler; Yolanda Lie; Jody Lawrence; Rose Kim; Michael Bates; Eoin Coakley; Colombe Chappey
Background The CPCRA 064 study examined the effect of structured treatment interruption (STI) of up to 4 months followed by salvage treatment in patients failing therapy with multi-drug resistant HIV. We examined the relationship between the reversion rate of major reverse transcriptase (RT) resistance-associated mutations and change in viral replication capacity (RC). The dataset included 90 patients with RC and genotypic data from virus samples collected at 0 (baseline), 2 and 4 months of STI. Principal Findings Rapid shift towards wild-type RC was observed during the first 2 months of STI. Median RC increased from 47.5% at baseline to 86.0% at 2 months and to 97.5% at 4 months. Between baseline and 2 months of STI, T215F had the fastest rate of reversion (41%) and the reversion of E44D and T69D was associated with the largest changes in RC. Among the most prevalent RT mutations, M184V had the fastest rate of reversion from baseline to 2 months (40%), and its reversion was associated with the largest increase in RC. Most rates of reversion increased between 2 months and 4 months, but the change in RC was more limited as it was already close to 100%. The highest frequency of concurrent reversion was found for L100I and K103N. Mutagenesis tree models showed that M184V, when present, was overall the first mutation to revert among all the RT mutations reported in the study. Conclusion Longitudinal analysis of combined phenotypic and genotypic data during STI showed a large amount of variability in prevalence and reversion rates to wild-type codons among the RT resistance-associated mutations. The rate of reversion of these mutations may depend on the extent of RC increase as well as the co-occurring reversion of other mutations belonging to the same mutational pathway.