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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 2000, p. 1051-1058, Vol. 44, No. 4
SRA Life Sciences, Rockville
Maryland1; Albany Medical College,
Albany, New York3; and University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, California2
Received 28 January 1999/Returned for modification 21 October
1999/Accepted 15 January 2000
Administration of the combination of
indinavir-zidovudine-lamivudine has been demonstrated to cause a large
fraction of treated patients to have a decline in human
immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) copy number to below the
detectability of sensitive assays. A recent investigation (G. L. Drusano, J. A. Bilello, D. S. Stein, M. Nessly, A. Meibohm,
E. A. Emini, P. Deutsch, J. Condra, J. Chodakewitz, and
D. J. Holder, J. Infect. Dis. 178:360-367, 1998)
demonstrated that the durability of the antiviral effect was affected
by combination chemotherapy. Zidovudine-lamivudine-indinavir differed
significantly from the combination of zidovudine plus indinavir. We
hypothesized that the addition of lamivudine might alter the regimen,
producing a synergistic anti-HIV effect. In vitro analysis of drug
interaction demonstrated that zidovudine-indinavir interacted
additively. The addition of lamivudine in concentrations which
suppressed viral replication by 20% or less by itself demonstrated marked increases in the synergy volume, increasing the synergy volume
20-fold with the addition of 320 nM lamivudine (which does not
suppress HIV by itself) and 40-fold with the addition of 1,000 nM
lamivudine (20% viral inhibition as a single agent). A fully parametric analysis with a newly developed model for three-drug interaction confirmed and extended these observations. The interaction term (
0066-4804/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Triple Combination
Indinavir-Zidovudine-Lamivudine Is Highly Synergistic
IND,AZT,3TC) for all three drugs showed the
greatest degree of synergy. This marked synergistic interaction among
the three agents may explain some of the clinical results which
differentiate this regimen from the double-drug regimen of zidovudine
plus indinavir.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of
Clinical Pharmacology, Departments of Medicine and Pharmacology, Albany Medical College, 47 New Scotland Ave., Albany, NY 12208. Phone: (518)
262-6761. Fax: (518) 262-6330. E-mail: GLDRUSANO{at}AOL.COM.
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