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 HIV and Hepatitis.com Coverage of the
49
th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2009)
September 12-15, 2009, San Francisco, CA
 The material posted on HIV and Hepatitis.com about the 49th ICAAC is not approved by the American Society for Microbiology
GRACE Trial Shows Women Respond as well as Men to Etravirine (Intelence), but Blacks May Have Poorer Outcomes than Whites

Researchers with the ongoing GRACE trial, evaluating the Tibotec protease inhibitor darunavir (Prezista), found that black participants were somewhat less like to respond to treatment and more likely to drop out of the study than whites. A second analysis from the trial showed that women and men responded equally well to the recently approved non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) etravirine (Intelence). Results from both analyses were presented as posters at the 49th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2009) this week in San Francisco.

By Liz Highleyman

Unlike many HIV treatment trials, which have enrolled mostly men, the Phase 3b GRACE study was designed to include enough HIV positive women to evaluate gender differences in treatment outcomes. The trial enrolled 287 women and 142 men.

The cohort was also racially/ethnically diverse, although the study was not powered to determine racial/ethnic differences in response. Overall, 264 participants self-identified as black, 65 as white or Caucasian, and 96 as Hispanic or Latino/a. About three-quarters of the black participants, about 60% of the Hispanic participants, and about half the white participants were women

As previously reported, overall 48-week results were presented this past summer at the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention in Cape Town.

The first analysis presented at ICAAC looked at racial/ethnic differences in response. About 33% of black participants discontinued the study, compared with 24% of Hispanics and 26% of whites. The difference was largely attributable to loss to follow-up.

About 3% of both blacks and whites discontinued due to virological failure, compared with 1% of Hispanics. At week 48, 62% of Hispanics and 60% of whites had HIV viral load < 50 copies/mL, compared with 49% of blacks. Furthermore, Hispanics and whites gained about 86 CD4 cells, compared with 69 for blacks.

Despite the trial design, the researchers noted, "we were not able to account for socioeconomic and other differences that we believe led to more black patents discontinuing than Hispanic or Caucasian patients and the resulting lower response rate in black patients."

"Further investigation of factors, such as differences in care, socioeconomic disparities, health literacy and adherence, which may impact race-based difference in response and discontinuation, is warranted.

The complete poster is available online.

Etravirine

etravirine (Intelence)

The second analysis focused on the 207 GRACE participants (48%) who took regimens that included etravirine; 58% were women, 64% were black, 17% were Hispanic, and 16% were white.

Response rates at 48 weeks in an intent-to-treat TLOVR analysis were 58% for women and 61% for men, not a statistically significant difference. Patients who took etravirine did better overall than those who used regimens that did not include this drug. In an observed (as-treated) analysis, women experienced larger CD4 cell gains than men (128 vs 95 cells/mm3).

Etravirine was well-tolerated overall, and there was little difference between women and men for most adverse events. Women, however, were more likely to experience nausea, while men more often had elevated triglyceride levels. More women taking etravirine developed rash compared with women in the full GRACE cohort.

The complete poster is available online.

New Jersey Med. School, Newark, NJ; Univ. of Miami School of Med., Miami, FL; Tibotec Therapeutics, Bridgewater, NJ; Tibotec, Inc., Yardley, PA.

9/18/09

References

K Smith, F Garcia, R Ryan, and others. GRACE (Gender, Race and Clinical Experience): Outcomes by Race at Week 48. 49th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC 2009). San Francisco. September 12-15, 2009. Abstract H-918.

SL Hodder, D Jayaweera, J Mrus, and others. GRACE (Gender, Race And Clinical Experience): Etravirine (ETR) Subgroup Analysis at Week 48. ICAAC 2009. Abstract H-919.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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