Medical Advocates for Social Justice
Conference Poster



1st International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis and Treatment. Buenos Aires, Argentina - 
July 8 - July 11, 2001

Kaletra (ABT-378/ritonavir) in HIV-Infected Children at 72 Weeks. P. Cahn1, C. Renz5, X. Saez-Lorens2, A. Violari3, P. Gomez4, and E. Sun5for the M98-940 Project Team.

1Fundacion Huesped, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2Hosp. del Nino, Panama City, Panama, 3Baragwanath Hosp., Johannesburg, South Africa, 4Princess Margaret, Nassau, Bahamas, and 5Abbott Laboratories


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BACKGROUND

Kaletra (formerly known as ABT-378/r, lopinavir/ritonavir) is a novel HIV protease inhibitor (PI) that has demonstrated significant antiviral activity and tolerability in clinical trials to date.

Lopinavir is co-formulated with ritonavir, an inhibitor of cytochrome P450 3A. It is uniquely sensitive to pharmacokinetic enhancement by ritonavir, resulting in substantially increased lopinavir plasma drug exposure, even at low ritonavir doses. At the capsule dosage selected for phase III clinical trials in adults, 400 mg lopinavir/100 mg ritonavir BID, ritonavir concentrations are below those required for antiviral activity.1

The efficacy and safety of Kaletra are currently being studied in HIV-infected adult subjects, both antiretroviral-naïve and PI-experienced. Study M98-940 is a Phase I/II, open-label study of co-formulated Kaletra (liquid) at two doses in combination with reverse transcriptase inhibitors in treatment-naïve and -experienced pediatric subjects.

METHODS

Objectives

Evaluation of the safety, tolerability, antiviral activity, and pharmacokinetics of co-formulated Kaletra (liquid) in HIV-infected children.

Entry Criteria

Study Design and Analysis

RESULTS

Treatment Experience and Pharmacokinetics

Subject Disposition

Safety



Viral Load Suppression to <400 copies/mL at 72 Weeks



Incidence of Resistance in Antiretroviral-Experienced Subjects

CD4 Count Response

CONCLUSIONS

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Fundacion Huesped, Buenos Aires, Argentina Patricia Coll, Carlos Zala
The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada Upton Allen
Univ. of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, U.S.A. Octavio Ramilo
St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York City, U.S.A. Stephen Arpadi
Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago, U.S.A. Ellen Chadwick
University Hospital of Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.A. Edward Handelsman
Max Finland Laboratory of Infectious Disease, Boston, U.S.A. Stephen Pelton
Abbott Laboratories Jaime Baldner, Richard Bertz, Carl Deetz, Ann Hsu, Ping Jiang, Dale Kempf, Renee Reitmeyer, Richard Rode
Pharmaceutical Research Associates, Inc. John DiFulvio, Jeff Knight, Andres Lategan, Nancy Rivera, Kathleen Walker, Terry Wheeler

Genotype and Phenotype testing was performed by ViroLogic, Inc.

REFERENCES

1. Bertz R, Lam W, Brun S, et al. Multiple-dose pharmacokinetics (PK) of ABT-378/ritonavir (Kaletra) in HIV+ subjects. 39th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, San Francisco, USA, 1999, (abstract 0327).

2. Hirsch MS, et al. Antiretroviral drug resistance testing in adults with HIV infection: Implications for Clinical Management. International AIDS Society—USA Panel. JAMA 1998; 279: 1984-91.

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