Journal article

Lopinavir-Ritonavir Impairs Adrenal Function in Infants


Authors listKariyawasam, Dulanjalee; Peries, Marianne; Foissac, Frantz; Eymard-Duvernay, Sabrina; Tylleskar, Thorkild; Singata-Madliki, Mandisa; Kankasa, Chipepo; Meda, Nicolas; Tumwine, James; Mwiya, Mwiya; Engebretsen, Ingunn; Flueck, Christa E.; Hartmann, Michaela F.; Wudy, Stefan A.; Hirt, Deborah; Treluyer, Jean Marc; Moles, Jean-Pierre; Blanche, Stephane; Van de Perre, Philippe; Polak, Michel; Nagot, Nicolas

Publication year2020

Pages1030-1039

JournalClinical Infectious Diseases

Volume number71

Issue number4

ISSN1058-4838

eISSN1537-6591

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciz888

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract

Background. Perinatal treatment with lopinavir boosted by ritonavir (LPV/r) is associated with steroidogenic abnormalities. Long-term effects in infants have not been studied.

Methods. Adrenal-hormone profiles were compared at weeks 6 and 26 between human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1-exposed but uninfected infants randomly assigned at 7 days of life to prophylaxis with LPV/r or lamivudine (3TC) to prevent transmission during breastfeeding. LPV/r in vitro effect on steroidogenesis was assessed in H295R cells.

Results. At week 6, 159 frozen plasma samples from Burkina Faso and South Africa were assessed (LPV/r group: n = 92; 3TC group: n = 67) and at week 26, 95 samples from Burkina Faso (LPV/r group: n = 47; 3TC group: n = 48). At week 6, LPV/r-treated infants had a higher median dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) level than infants from the 3TC arm: 3.91 versus 1.48 ng/mL (P < .001). Higher DHEA levels (>5 ng/mL) at week 6 were associated with higher 17-OH-pregnenolone (7.78 vs 3.71 ng/mL, P = .0004) and lower testosterone (0.05 vs 1.34 ng/mL, P = .009) levels in LPV/r-exposed children. There was a significant correlation between the DHEA and LPV/r AUC levels (rho = 0.40, P = .019) and C-trough (rho = 0.40, P = .017). At week 26, DHEA levels remained higher in the LPV/r arm: 0.45 versus 0.13 ng/mL (P = .002). Lopinavir, but not ritonavir, inhibited CYP17A1 and CYP21A2 activity in H295R cells.

Conclusions. Lopinavir was associated with dose-dependent adrenal dysfunction in infants. The impact of long-term exposure and potential clinical consequences require evaluation.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKariyawasam, D., Peries, M., Foissac, F., Eymard-Duvernay, S., Tylleskar, T., Singata-Madliki, M., et al. (2020) Lopinavir-Ritonavir Impairs Adrenal Function in Infants, Clinical Infectious Diseases, 71(4), pp. 1030-1039. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciz888

APA Citation styleKariyawasam, D., Peries, M., Foissac, F., Eymard-Duvernay, S., Tylleskar, T., Singata-Madliki, M., Kankasa, C., Meda, N., Tumwine, J., Mwiya, M., Engebretsen, I., Flueck, C., Hartmann, M., Wudy, S., Hirt, D., Treluyer, J., Moles, J., Blanche, S., Van de Perre, P., ...Nagot, N. (2020). Lopinavir-Ritonavir Impairs Adrenal Function in Infants. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 71(4), 1030-1039. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciz888



Keywords


adrenal function impairmentAGING POPULATIONANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPYCYP21 and CYP17 inhibitionHIVHIV infant prophylaxisINFECTED PREGNANT-WOMENlopinavirLOPINAVIR/RITONAVIRPROTEASE INHIBITOR

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:16