Conference Coverage

Dolutegravir-based regimen effective in HIV/TB coinfected


 

REPORTING FROM CROI

– In antiretroviral therapy–naive patients with HIV and tuberculosis coinfection, a combination of dolutegravir-based ART and rifampin-based TB therapy was associated with good efficacy and immunological responses through at least 24 weeks, investigators reported.

Dolutegravir-based ART appeared to be comparable to efavirenz-based therapy at viral suppression with a similar safety profile, although the trial was not powered for head-to-head comparison, said Kelly Dooley, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.

“We know that rifampin reduces concentrations of dolutegravir substantially, but that drug interaction can be mitigated by increasing the dose of dolutegravir to twice daily. That information was from a healthy volunteer trial, so we thought it would be important to test HIV/TB cotreatment among patients who have both infections,” she said at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections.

Dr. Dooley and her colleagues looked at dolutegravir or efavirenz plus rifampin-based TB therapy in the INSPIRING trial.

Pages

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: The return of Kaposi’s sarcoma
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bloating. Flatulence. Think SIBO
MDedge Internal Medicine
One-month TB-prevention regimen effective in HIV+ individuals
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hair tracks HIV antiretroviral adherence
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves new treatment for multidrug-resistant HIV
MDedge Internal Medicine
HIV diagnosis at home and same-day ART start tied to better outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Raltegravir not associated with IRIS in African trial
MDedge Internal Medicine
‘Clean and sober’ ex-prisoners have better HIV suppression
MDedge Internal Medicine
Looking to increase PrEP uptake
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hospital urine screening reduces TB deaths in HIV+ adults
MDedge Internal Medicine