In the management of virologically suppressed patients living with HIV, efavirenz 400 mg has noninferior efficacy and favourable safety as compared with the 600 mg-based regimen, according to a study from China.
The study included 209 patients (median age 33.6 years, 98.1 percent men, median body mass index 22.72 kg/m²) with virological suppression whose treatment regimen consisted of tenofovir, lamivudine, and efavirenz 600 mg. These patients were randomized to continue original regimen or switch to two-tablet efavirenz 200 mg.
All patients completed self-reported adherence questionnaires, including the 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) at baseline and week 48. The primary outcome was the difference in proportions of patients with plasma HIV-RNA ≥50 copies/mL at week 48 with noninferiority margin of 4 percent.
Of the patients, 299 (71.2 percent) reported previous unprotected sex with men. The assay did not detect HIV-RNA in 91.0 percent of the population. Median time on antiretroviral therapy was 3.4 years, while median CD4+ T cell count was 558 cells/μl.
At week 48, virological failure occurred in 11 patients in the efavirenz 400-mg group and in 18 in the 600-mg group (5.3 percent vs 8.5 percent, respectively). The difference was –3.3 percent (95 percent confidence interval [CI], –8.1 to 1.6), indicating that the 400-mg regimen was noninferior to the 600-mg regimen.
There were no significant changes in adherence, quality of life, and neuropsychologic condition documented. On the other hand, switching to the 400-mg efavirenz regimen led to a greater improvement of safety in terms of liver enzyme and blood lipid.