AIDS research and human retroviruses
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AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses · Feb 2008
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialEfficacy of epoetin alfa administered every 2 weeks to maintain hemoglobin and quality of life in anemic HIV-infected patients.
Anemia, a common hematological abnormality in HIV, contributes to decreased quality of life (QOL). This study assessed once-every-2-week epoetin alfa on maintaining QOL and hemoglobin (Hb) in anemic HIV-infected patients in a 24-week, open-label, multicenter study. HIV-infected patients (Hb < or =12 g/dl) received epoetin alfa 40,000 units subcutaneously once weekly, until reaching Hb > or =13 g/dl. ⋯ Mean Hb at the beginning of MP was 13.4 +/- 0.5 g/dl and was 12.8 +/- 1.4 g/dl at study end. Epoetin alfa was well tolerated; adverse events were consistent with those reported in previous studies of epoetin alfa in HIV-infected patients. Although the clinical approach tested in this study is not consistent with current prescribing recommendations, the results confirm the efficacy of prolonged dosing intervals (every 2-4 weeks) in maintaining optimal Hb levels and QOL in anemic HIV-infected patients.
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AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses · Feb 2008
Cytokine genotype suggests a role for inflammation in nucleoside analog-associated sensory neuropathy (NRTI-SN) and predicts an individual's NRTI-SN risk.
Nucleoside analog-associated sensory neuropathy (NRTI-SN) attributed to stavudine, didanosine, or zalcitabine (the dNRTIs) and distal sensory polyneuropathy (DSP) attributed to HIV are clinically indistinguishable. As inflammatory cytokines are involved in DSP, we addressed a role for inflammation in NRTI-SN by determining the alleles of immune-related genes carried by patients with and without NRTI-SN. Demographic details associated with risk of various neuropathies were included in the analysis. ⋯ Of the demographic details considered, increasing height was associated with NRTI-SN risk. A model including cytokine genotype and height predicted NRTI-SN status (p < 0.0001, R(2) = 0.54). Late onset NRTI-SN patients clustered genetically with NRTI-SN-resistant patients, so these patients may be genetically "protected." In addition to patient height, cytokine genotype influenced NRTI-SN risk following dNRTI exposure, suggesting inflammation contributes to NRTI-SN.