Has the phasing out of stavudine in accordance with changes in WHO guidelines led to a decrease in single-drug substitutions in first-line antiretroviral therapy for HIV in sub-Saharan Africa?
Date Issued
2017-01Publisher Version
10.1097/QAD.0000000000001307Author(s)
Brennan, Alana T.
Davies, Mary-Ann
Bor, Jacob
Wandelere, G.
Stinson, K.
Wood, R.
Prozesky, H.
Tanser, F.
Fatii, G.
Boulle, A.
Sikazwe, I.
Wool-Kaloustian, K.
Yuannoutsos, C.
Leroy, V.
de Rekeneire, N.
Fox, M.P.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2144/31120Citation (published version)
Brennan, A. T., Davies, M. A., Bor, J., Wandeler, G., Stinson, K., Wood, R., ... & Sikazwe, I. (2017). Has the phasing out of stavudine in accordance with changes in WHO guidelines led to a decrease in single-drug substitutions in first-line antiretroviral therapy for HIV in sub-Saharan Africa?. AIDS (London, England), 31(1), 147-157. https://doi.org/10.1097/QAD.0000000000001307.Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We assessed the relationship between phasing out stavudine in first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) in accordance with WHO 2010 policy and single-drug substitutions (SDS) (substituting the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor in first-line ART) in sub-Saharan Africa.
DESIGN: Prospective cohort analysis (International epidemiological Databases to Evaluate AIDS-Multiregional) including ART-naive, HIV-infected patients aged at least 16 years, initiating ART between January 2005 and December 2012. Before April 2010 (July 2007 in Zambia) national guidelines called for patients to initiate stavudine-based or zidovudine-based regimen, whereas thereafter tenofovir or zidovudine replaced stavudine in first-line ART.
METHODS: We evaluated the frequency of stavudine use and SDS by calendar year 2004-2014. Competing risk regression was used to assess the association between nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor use and SDS in the first 24 months on ART.
RESULTS: In all, 33 441 (8.9%; 95% confience interval 8.7-8.9%) SDS occurred among 377 656 patients in the first 24 months on ART, close to 40% of which were amongst patients on stavudine. The decrease in SDS corresponded with the phasing out of stavudine. Competing risks regression models showed that patients on tenofovir were 20-95% less likely to require a SDS than patients on stavudine, whereas patients on zidovudine had a 75-85% decrease in the hazards of SDS when compared to stavudine.
CONCLUSION: The decline in SDS in the first 24 months on treatment appears to be associated with phasing out stavudine for zidovudine or tenofovir in first-line ART in our study. Further efforts to decrease the cost of tenofovir and zidovudine for use in this setting is warranted to substitute all patients still receiving stavudine.
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This version is the Accepted Manuscript and is published in final edited form as:
AIDS. 2017 January 02; 31(1): 147–157. doi:10.1097/QAD.0000000000001307
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