Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fusidic acid has previously been noted to prevent syncytial formation by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in vitro. Since this drug is a cheap, usually well-tolerated substance with known toxicity profile, an open, uncontrolled trial was undertaken to evaluate its possible efficacy in HIV disease. Twenty HIV antibody positive patients (10 with AIDS and 10 with ARC) were treated with sodium fusidate 500 mg every 8 h for up to 3 months. One patient died during therapy and six ceased treatment due to adverse events. Rash, nausea, diarrhea, and/or abdominal pain caused difficulties in all patients. There was no significant improvement in clinical state or T-helper cell levels, and no observed decrease in HIV p24 antigen during treatment. We conclude that in this open trial, sodium fusidate had no observable beneficial clinical, virological, or immunological effects.
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PMID:Clinical, immunological, and virological effects of sodium fusidate in patients with AIDS or AIDS-related complex (ARC): an open study. 249 93

To investigate the pharmacokinetics and effects of intravenous foscarnet, 13 relatively healthy male patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection and a mean CD4+ lymphocyte value of 0.45 x 10(-9) cells per liter were given a continuous intravenous infusion of foscarnet (0.14 to 0.19 mg/kg per min) for 8 to 21 days. Blood and urine samples were taken during and after drug administration to monitor foscarnet concentrations. Lumbar puncture was performed during the infusion in five patients. The concentrations in plasma showed large variations both within and between patients. The disposition of foscarnet could be explained by a triexponential equation (t1/2 lambda 1, 0.40 to 2.52 h; t1/2 lambda 2, 3.20 to 16.7 h; t1/2 lambda 3, 36 to 196 h). Renal clearance accounted for most of the plasma clearance, the difference probably reflecting the passage of foscarnet into bone. Up to 20% of the cumulative dose may have been deposited in bone 7 days postinfusion. Foscarnet was distributed to the cerebrospinal fluid in a concentration varying from 13 to 68% of the simultaneous concentration in plasma. Polyuria and polydipsia were recorded in all patients. There appears to be an association between the degree of malaise, including symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, fatigue, and headache, and concentrations in plasma above 350 mumol/liter.
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PMID:Pharmacokinetics of foscarnet and distribution to cerebrospinal fluid after intravenous infusion in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 252 39

To characterize the nature, time course and dose dependency of zidovudine-related side effects, we undertook a multicenter, prospective, dose-range finding study. Our study group consisted of 74 HIV-positive homosexual men belonging to groups II B, III and IV C2 from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) classification of HIV disease. Following a 3-week observation period, volunteers were treated with zidovudine 600 mg/day for 18 weeks, 900 mg/day for 9 weeks and 1200 mg/day for 9 weeks, followed by a washout period of 6 weeks after which they were re-started on 1200 mg/day or the highest tolerated dose at 8-hourly intervals. Subjects were randomly assigned to 4-hourly or 8-hourly regimens within CDC groups while taking 600 and 1200 mg/day. Clinical and laboratory evaluations were performed at 3-week intervals. Symptomatic adverse effects were present in 96% of subjects, most commonly nausea (64%), fatigue (55%) and headache (49%). These were generally self-limited, reappearing briefly at each dose increment. A decrease in hemoglobin occurred shortly after initiation of therapy. This was not dose dependent and reversed rapidly upon discontinuation of treatment. A red blood cell count decrease, a mean cell volume increase and a granulocyte count decrease developed early in a dose-independent fashion, reverting at least partially during the washout phase. The decrease in reticulocyte count was dose related between 600 and 900 mg/day with no further change when the dose was escalated to 1200 mg/day. Bone marrow changes occurred rapidly as demonstrated by megaloblastosis in 95% of 65 specimens at week 18.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Nature, time course and dose dependence of zidovudine-related side effects: results from the Multicenter Canadian Azidothymidine Trial. 252 69

Zidovudine (3'-azido-3'deoxythymidine, AZT, Retrovir) is the first antiretroviral drug to demonstrate clinical efficacy for symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus infection. In a large, placebo-controlled trial, nausea and hematologic toxicity, but not fever, occurred more frequently in zidovudine- than in placebo-treated patients. However, in an open label study, fever severe enough to halt zidovudine administration occurred in 10% of 70 acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients receiving the drug. We now describe three AIDS patients with severe zidovudine-induced fever in whom other causes of fever were excluded. Zidovudine-induced fever was confirmed in each case by drug rechallenge. Using an enzyme immunoassay, we detected IgM antibodies directed against a zidovudine-serum protein conformational determinant in one of these three patients. Neither IgG nor IgM anti-zidovudine antibodies were present in sera from the other two patients with zidovudine fever, from four AIDS patients who discontinued zidovudine for reasons other than fever, or from five AIDS patients who never received zidovudine. Zidovudine may cause fever as a severe adverse effect in patients with AIDS. Either type III or type IV hypersensitivity may mediate this reaction.
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PMID:Zidovudine-induced fever. 266 40

The clinical symptoms and signs were assessed in 20 consecutive patients developing infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). All were male homosexuals and all presented with a glandular-fever-like illness. Changes in laboratory values were compared with findings in 40 HIV negative male homosexual controls. In the 10 patients for whom date of exposure to the virus could be established the incubation period was 11-28 days (median 14). One or two days after the sudden onset of fever patients developed sore throat, lymphadenopathy, rash, lethargy, coated tongue, tonsillar hypertrophy, dry cough, headache, myalgia, conjunctivitis, vomiting, night sweats, nausea, diarrhoea, and palatal enanthema. Twelve patients had painful, shallow ulcers in the mouth or on the genitals or anus or as manifested by oesophageal symptoms; these ulcers may have been the site of entry of the virus. During the first week after the onset of symptoms mild leucopenia, thrombocytopenia, and increased numbers of banded neutrophils were detected (p less than 0.0005). The mean duration of acute illness was 12.7 days (range 5-44). All patients remained healthy during a mean follow up period of 2.5 years. Heightened awareness of the typical clinical picture in patients developing primary HIV infection will alert the physician at an early stage and so aid prompt diagnosis and help contain the epidemic spread of AIDS.
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PMID:Clinical picture of primary HIV infection presenting as a glandular-fever-like illness. 314 67

A 47-year-old female with acute myeloid leukemia received HIV positive platelets during induction chemotherapy. 18 days later, coincident with the recovery of the bone marrow function, she developed an erythematous rash, mild lymphadenopathy, and nausea which disappeared within 10 days. A week later mild CSF pleocytosis consisting of mature lymphocytes and macrophages together with elevated CSF protein levels (1,080 mg/l) were observed suggesting mild aseptic meningitis, and the HIV was concomitantly isolated from CSF. The CSF abnormalities have improved and the patient is well and in remission after 3 cycles of chemotherapy. This case expands the clinical spectrum of HIV infection to include a primary syndrome during immunosuppression from an unrelated cause.
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PMID:Primary infection with HIV in a severely immunosuppressed patient with acute leukemia. 347 78

The objective of this study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of a brief index to measure symptoms in individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). From an ambulatory clinic that specializes in the care of HIV-infected individuals at a university hospital in northeast Ohio, 148 randomly selected outpatients (predominantly homosexual men) with a broad spectrum of HIV disease were enrolled in a prospective, cohort study. In standard interviews, patients rated the frequency of 36 symptoms related to HIV infection on an ordinal scale from zero (never) to three (daily); these interviews were repeated and outcomes determined every 3 months for one year. Clinical data were abstracted from the medical record with a standard chart review. Using specific criteria, 12 symptoms were selected for the HIV Symptom Index: fatigue, fevers, headache, imbalance, paresthesias, memory loss, cough, nausea, diarrhea, sadness, sleep disturbance, and skin problems. The HIV Symptom score (the sum of frequency ratings for the 12 symptoms) ranged from 0 to 31 with a mean of 9.4 (+/- SD 6.6). The test-retest reliability was high (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.92) as was the internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.79). The validity of the index was established with three observations. (1) The HIV Symptom Index makes clinical sense and includes a representative spectrum of symptoms of infection. (2) Symptom Index scores were greater in patients with more advanced disease and in patients who were functionally impaired. (3) The Index was responsive to changes in health as the disease progressed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:An index of symptoms for infection with human immunodeficiency virus: reliability and validity. 773 Aug 79

The prevention of cerebral toxoplasmosis and of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is an essential objective in the management of patients infected with HIV. Given that roxithromycin is active in vitro against Toxoplasma gondii and that in 1989 Dolermann reported the effective treatment of P. carinii respiratory infections with erythromycin, a randomized pilot study was undertaken in 52 patients infected with HIV. Patients were treated with either: a monthly dose of pentamidine aerosol (300 mg); roxithromycin once a week (300 mg t.i.d.); or a combination of pentamidine aerosol and roxithromycin. Intention to treat analysis was applied to these 52 patients, all of whom received at least one treatment dose. Five out of 18 patients treated with pentamidine aerosol, 1/17 patients treated with pentamidine aerosol + roxithromycin and none of the 17 patients treated with roxithromycin developed cerebral toxoplasmosis (p = 0.038). P. carinii pneumonia was diagnosed in one patient in the pentamidine aerosol-treated group, in one patient treated with roxithromycin and in none of the patients treated with pentamidine aerosol + roxithromycin (non-significant difference). Four cases of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection were seen in the pentamidine aerosol-treated group (p = 0.028) and none in the roxithromycin groups. Adverse events leading to the discontinuation of treatment occurred in 5/34 (14.7%) patients treated with roxithromycin. Nausea, abdominal pain and raised transaminases occurred in four patients and a skin allergy in the final patient. Roxithromycin appears to be effective in the prevention of pulmonary pneumocystis infection and of cerebral toxoplasmosis in HIV-infected patients. However, these results require confirmation in a larger study.
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PMID:Prevention of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and of cerebral toxoplasmosis by roxithromycin in HIV-infected patients. 778 14

To determine the effect of zidovudine (ZDV) on the pharmacokinetic disposition of recombinant soluble CD4 immunoglobulin G (rCD4-IgG) and to evaluate the safety and preliminary activity of concurrent administration of ZDV with rCD4-IgG, we undertook an open-label, dose-escalating, 12-week study. The regimens of intravenous rCD4-IgG and oral ZDV we used were (a) 300 micrograms/kg rCD4-IgG twice per week and 300 mg ZDV per day, (b) 300 micrograms/kg rCD4-IgG twice per week and 600 mg ZDV per day, (c) 1,000 micrograms/kg rCD4-IgG twice per week and 300 mg ZDV per day, (d) 1,000 micrograms/kg rCD4-IgG twice per week and 600 mg ZDV per day, and (e) 3,000 micrograms/kg rCD4-IgG twice per week and 300 mg ZDV per day. Subjects were recruited from three AIDS clinical trials units. Forty-one patients with HIV infection who had CD4 cell counts < or = 500 cells/mm3 and < 120 days of previous ZDV therapy participated. Pharmacokinetic interactions were assessed with the second regimen. Mean calculated peak serum rCD4-IgG concentrations were 5.47 micrograms/ml with ZDV and 8.28 micrograms/ml without ZDV, with serum half-lives of 34.2 and 32.0 h, respectively. Antibodies to rCD4-IgG were not detected. Seven episodes of severe adverse events occurred in five patients: one episode each of severe nausea, fever, or abnormal liver function tests and four episodes of severe neutropenia. Mean hemoglobin and neutrophil counts decreased, and mean platelet counts increased in all regimens, but there were no significant differences among regimens, rCD4-IgG dose, or ZDV dose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Combination therapy with recombinant human soluble CD4-immunoglobulin G and zidovudine in patients with HIV infection: a phase I study. 783 98

Valaciclovir, the L-valyl ester of acyclovir, is rapidly and extensively converted in humans to acyclovir after oral administration by first-pass metabolism. A phase I study was conducted in two cohorts of volunteers with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease (absolute CD4 lymphocyte count of < 150 cells per microliters) who received oral valaciclovir at dosages of 1,000 or 2,000 mg four times daily for 30 days. All patients were clinically stable without any changes in underlying HIV-related medications for > or = 6 weeks prior to entry in study; these medications were continued throughout the study. Multiple-dose administration of valaciclovir showed a generally favorable safety profile. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain each were reported in < or = 31% of the patients; of these symptoms, only one episode of diarrhea was considered causally related to valaciclovir exposure. Four patients developed neutropenia (two at each dose level) which was not clinically significant. There were no renal or neurologic adverse events. Valaciclovir was rapidly absorbed and converted to acyclovir, with plasma valaciclovir levels generally undetectable or levels of < or = 0.4 microgram/ml. After 3 h postdosing, valaciclovir was not detectable in plasma. Acyclovir was measurable in plasma as early as 15 min following valaciclovir dosing, and plasma concentrations of acyclovir greatly exceeded those of valaciclovir. The mean values for the maximum concentration of drug in plasma, time to maximum concentration of drug in plasma, area under the concentration-time curve from 0 h to infinity, and apparent half-life of acyclovir obtained after single- and multiple-dose valaciclovir administration in HIV-infected patients were similar to those reported in normal healthy volunteers. The time to maximum concentration in serum and half-life of acyclovir after valaciclovir administration were approximately 2 and 3 h, respectively, which were similar to those reported after oral administration of acyclovir itself. The mean trough and peak acyclovir concentrations and the daily area under the concentration-time curve acyclovir values at steady state were 2.5 and 8.4 micrograms/ml and 120 h micrograms/ml, respectively, after a dosage of 2,000 mg of valaciclovir four times daily. These values were approximately fivefold greater than those achieved with high dosages of oral acyclovir (800 mg, five times daily) and were not affected by continued use of medications necessary for management of advanced HIV disease. Thus, 2,000 mg of valaciclovir given orally four times daily should be evaluated for its potential efficacy in suppressing cytomegalovirus and other herpes group virus infections not optimally managed with current oral acyclovir therapy.
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PMID:Phase I trial of valaciclovir, the L-valyl ester of acyclovir, in patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus disease. 797 85


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