Estudio primario

No clasificado

Año 2010
Autores Duke, N , Aboh, S , Bosivert, N
Revista West Indian med. j

Este artículo no está incluido en ninguna revisión sistemática

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La introducción de la terapia antiretroviral en Trinidad y Tobago en la década de 1980, ha producido una disminución en la mortalidad de personas infectadas por el VIH. La adhesión pobre a la terapia antiretroviral (TAR) ha conducido al desarrollo de una variedad de VIH resistente a las multidrogas. Las pruebas de resistencia realizadas a 40 muestras mostró que el 64.8% de los pacientes tenían mutación K103, 75.6% de los pacientes tenían mutaciones M184, y 62% de pacientes mostraron resistencia al tenofovir, lo que indica una alta probabilidad de mutación K65R. Había actividad reducida respecto a los inhibidores de la proteasa; mientras que no se halló ninguna resistencia en el inhibidor de la protease, darunavir. Así, hay necesidad de introducir una terapia de salvamento qué produzca una supresión virológica y potencialmente detenga la diseminación del VIH resistente a las multidrogas. El darunavir - inhibidor de nueva generación frente a la proteasa -es una parte fundamental de la terapia de salvamento y necesita ser introducido en el formulario nacional.

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Estudio primario

No clasificado

Año 2009
Revista Journal of managed care pharmacy : JMCP
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BACKGROUND:

The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) develops guidelines for VHA providers that delineate specific criteria for use of certain complex, costly medications indicated for specialized populations. These criteria are disseminated to all VHA facilities.

OBJECTIVE:

To (a) assess the concordance with VHA guidelines for use of 4 antiretrovirals (atazanavir, darunavir, enfuvirtide, and tipranavir), and (b) to describe prescribing of these agents before and after implementation of the guideline criteria.

METHODS:

In this retrospective cohort study, we evaluated all veterans in VHA care who received their first outpatient prescription for a target antiretroviral between its FDA approval date and December 31, 2007, using outpatient prescription records obtained from the VHA Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Clinical Case Registry (

CCR:

HIV), an observational registry database created through extraction of specific clinical data from the VHA's electronic medical record. Adherence to the VHA guideline criteria was assessed using

CCR:

HIV data overall and during 3 time periods: (a) pre-criteria: from FDA approval date to criteria implementation date (range 38 days to 192 days), (b) early-criteria: the first 6 months after criteria implementation, and (c) late-criteria: from 180 days after criteria implementation until December 31, 2007 (range 184 days to 1,525 days).

RESULTS:

VHA providers prescribed target antiretroviral medications in accordance with the VHA guidelines for use more than 70% of the time. Comparing the pre-criteria with the post-criteria period (i.e., early-criteria and late-criteria combined), no significant differences in the percentages of veterans satisfying all VHA criteria were observed for any drug except atazanavir (P = 0.010). For atazanavir in the post-criteria period compared with the pre-criteria period, significantly more antiretroviral-naive veterans met criteria for cardiovascular disease or risk (72.8% post-criteria vs. 45.5% pre-criteria, P = 0.045), and significantly more antiretroviral-experienced veterans met criteria for resistance to other protease inhibitors requiring the need for ritonavir-boosted atazanavir (61.7% vs. 50.5%, respectively, P < 0.001); however, fewer antiretroviral-experienced veterans met criteria for having documented intolerance to other protease inhibitors (78.9% vs. 89.9%, respectively, P < 0.001). Fewer darunavir-treated patients in the post-criteria period than in the pre-criteria period met the criteria for treatment experience including failure of at least 1 prior protease inhibitor regimen (87.8% vs. 96.0%, respectively, P = 0.002). Adherence to all darunavir criteria significantly waned over time (early-criteria 78.8% vs. late-criteria 62.5%, P < 0.001). Overall, adherence to atazanavir criteria increased over time (66.3% early-criteria vs. 72.9% late-criteria, P < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS:

After implementation of antiretroviral specific guideline criteria, the proportion of veterans prescribed a target antiretroviral medication in accordance with VHA guideline criteria varied by agent and improved only for atazanavir. Although adherence to criteria for atazanavir, enfuvirtide, and tipranavir persisted or improved during the post-criteria period, darunavir adherence to criteria waned over time, perhaps indicating that later prescribing patterns reflected changing practice patterns and the need for updated criteria. Revisiting and updating criteria may be especially important for HIV due to the speed with which new information becomes available.

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