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Title: T-1249 retains potent antiretroviral activity in patients who had experienced virological failure while on an enfuvirtide-containing treatment regimen. Author: Lalezari JP, Bellos NC, Sathasivam K, Richmond GJ, Cohen CJ, Myers RA, Henry DH, Raskino C, Melby T, Murchison H, Zhang Y, Spence R, Greenberg ML, Demasi RA, Miralles GD, T1249-102 Study Group. Journal: J Infect Dis; 2005 Apr 01; 191(7):1155-63. PubMed ID: 15747252. Abstract: BACKGROUND: T-1249 is a 39-amino acid synthetic peptide fusion inhibitor (FI) shown to preserve antiretroviral activity in vitro against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) isolates that have decreased susceptibility to enfuvirtide (ENF). METHODS: A 10-day phase 1/2 study of the safety and antiretroviral activity of T-1249 was conducted in 53 HIV-1-infected adults with detectable viremia while on an ENF-containing treatment regimen. RESULTS: From FI-naive baseline levels, the geometric mean (GM) decrease in susceptibility to ENF was 116.3-fold, and the GM decrease in susceptibility to T-1249 was 2.0-fold. Patients continued to administer their failing treatment regimen but replaced ENF with T-1249 at a dose of 192 mg/day. T-1249 was generally well tolerated; injection site reactions, which were generally mild, were the most commonly reported adverse event (64% of patients). The median change from levels of HIV-1 RNA at baseline to levels on day 11 was -1.26 log(10) copies/mL (95% confidence interval, -1.40 to -1.09 log(10) copies/mL); on day 11, a decrease from baseline HIV-1 RNA levels of >/=1.0 log(10) copies/mL was seen in 73% of patients. Antiretroviral activity, as measured by levels of HIV-1 RNA, was not predicted by baseline susceptibility to T-1249 or to ENF; genotypic substitutions that emerged during T-1249 treatment were identified in virus from some patients. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that FIs constitute an expanding class of antiretroviral agents with the potential to be sequenced.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]