Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients.

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Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients. / Salzberger, B; Däumer, M; Gute, P; Jaeger, H; Knechten, H; van Lunzen, Jan; Mauss, S; Mayr, C; Moll, A; Plettenberg, A; Rockstroh, J; Staszewski, S; Stellbrink, H J; Stoll, M; Sturmer, M.

in: EUR J MED RES, Jahrgang 12, Nr. 3, 3, 2007, S. 93-102.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Salzberger, B, Däumer, M, Gute, P, Jaeger, H, Knechten, H, van Lunzen, J, Mauss, S, Mayr, C, Moll, A, Plettenberg, A, Rockstroh, J, Staszewski, S, Stellbrink, HJ, Stoll, M & Sturmer, M 2007, 'Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients.', EUR J MED RES, Jg. 12, Nr. 3, 3, S. 93-102. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17507306?dopt=Citation>

APA

Salzberger, B., Däumer, M., Gute, P., Jaeger, H., Knechten, H., van Lunzen, J., Mauss, S., Mayr, C., Moll, A., Plettenberg, A., Rockstroh, J., Staszewski, S., Stellbrink, H. J., Stoll, M., & Sturmer, M. (2007). Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients. EUR J MED RES, 12(3), 93-102. [3]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17507306?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Salzberger B, Däumer M, Gute P, Jaeger H, Knechten H, van Lunzen J et al. Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients. EUR J MED RES. 2007;12(3):93-102. 3.

Bibtex

@article{a765d205f0694b989d02b5a0b40b11ca,
title = "Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The EU approval of enfuvirtide (Fuzeon) was granted in May 2003 on the basis of the 48-week data from the TORO 1 and TORO 2 studies. Enfuvirtide is licensed for use in pretreated HIV patients experienced with three classes of drugs who exhibited treatment failure or who have shown intolerance to previous antiretroviral treatment regimens. Recent studies with the new protease inhibitors tipranavir and darunavir (RESIST and POWER studies) showed that a high proportion of heavily pretreated HIV patients achieve a viral load reduction to below the limit of detection when treated with enfuvirtide plus one of these new ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitors and an optimised background treatment regimen. The International AIDS Society (IAS-USA Panel) has recently updated its treatment guidelines in view of these new data and recommends the use of an antiretroviral treatment regimen containing at least two active drugs, one of which that has a new mechanism of action, for HIV patients who have been heavily pretreated. A new treatment goal has also emerged for heavily pretreated patients with advanced HIV disease: reduction of the viral load to below the detection limit of 50 copies/ml. The IAS concluded that the likelihood of achieving this treatment goal is higher when enfuvirtide is selected as one of the two active drugs. OBJECTIVE: A panel of German experts convened to discuss the currently available data and to incorporate them into the updated German consensus recommendations for the use of enfuvirtide when switching treatment in heavily pretreated HIV patients. METHODS: The consensus recommendations are based on published data from controlled, randomised clinical studies and on the expert opinions of the discussants. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The consensus recommendations were developed to provide practice-relevant standardised recommendations for selecting suitable candidates for enfuvirtide therapy and for their management. Aspects including predictive prognostic factors, disease stage, selection of the optimised background regimen, early indicators of a response to enfuvirtide, as well as accompanying educational measures treatment were considered. New protease inhibitors or other remaining active drugs should be used together with enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated patients in order to enable at least two active drugs to be included in such a salvage regimen.",
author = "B Salzberger and M D{\"a}umer and P Gute and H Jaeger and H Knechten and {van Lunzen}, Jan and S Mauss and C Mayr and A Moll and A Plettenberg and J Rockstroh and S Staszewski and Stellbrink, {H J} and M Stoll and M Sturmer",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "12",
pages = "93--102",
journal = "EUR J MED RES",
issn = "0949-2321",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Consensus recommendation from a group of German experts for the use of enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated HIV patients.

AU - Salzberger, B

AU - Däumer, M

AU - Gute, P

AU - Jaeger, H

AU - Knechten, H

AU - van Lunzen, Jan

AU - Mauss, S

AU - Mayr, C

AU - Moll, A

AU - Plettenberg, A

AU - Rockstroh, J

AU - Staszewski, S

AU - Stellbrink, H J

AU - Stoll, M

AU - Sturmer, M

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - BACKGROUND: The EU approval of enfuvirtide (Fuzeon) was granted in May 2003 on the basis of the 48-week data from the TORO 1 and TORO 2 studies. Enfuvirtide is licensed for use in pretreated HIV patients experienced with three classes of drugs who exhibited treatment failure or who have shown intolerance to previous antiretroviral treatment regimens. Recent studies with the new protease inhibitors tipranavir and darunavir (RESIST and POWER studies) showed that a high proportion of heavily pretreated HIV patients achieve a viral load reduction to below the limit of detection when treated with enfuvirtide plus one of these new ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitors and an optimised background treatment regimen. The International AIDS Society (IAS-USA Panel) has recently updated its treatment guidelines in view of these new data and recommends the use of an antiretroviral treatment regimen containing at least two active drugs, one of which that has a new mechanism of action, for HIV patients who have been heavily pretreated. A new treatment goal has also emerged for heavily pretreated patients with advanced HIV disease: reduction of the viral load to below the detection limit of 50 copies/ml. The IAS concluded that the likelihood of achieving this treatment goal is higher when enfuvirtide is selected as one of the two active drugs. OBJECTIVE: A panel of German experts convened to discuss the currently available data and to incorporate them into the updated German consensus recommendations for the use of enfuvirtide when switching treatment in heavily pretreated HIV patients. METHODS: The consensus recommendations are based on published data from controlled, randomised clinical studies and on the expert opinions of the discussants. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The consensus recommendations were developed to provide practice-relevant standardised recommendations for selecting suitable candidates for enfuvirtide therapy and for their management. Aspects including predictive prognostic factors, disease stage, selection of the optimised background regimen, early indicators of a response to enfuvirtide, as well as accompanying educational measures treatment were considered. New protease inhibitors or other remaining active drugs should be used together with enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated patients in order to enable at least two active drugs to be included in such a salvage regimen.

AB - BACKGROUND: The EU approval of enfuvirtide (Fuzeon) was granted in May 2003 on the basis of the 48-week data from the TORO 1 and TORO 2 studies. Enfuvirtide is licensed for use in pretreated HIV patients experienced with three classes of drugs who exhibited treatment failure or who have shown intolerance to previous antiretroviral treatment regimens. Recent studies with the new protease inhibitors tipranavir and darunavir (RESIST and POWER studies) showed that a high proportion of heavily pretreated HIV patients achieve a viral load reduction to below the limit of detection when treated with enfuvirtide plus one of these new ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitors and an optimised background treatment regimen. The International AIDS Society (IAS-USA Panel) has recently updated its treatment guidelines in view of these new data and recommends the use of an antiretroviral treatment regimen containing at least two active drugs, one of which that has a new mechanism of action, for HIV patients who have been heavily pretreated. A new treatment goal has also emerged for heavily pretreated patients with advanced HIV disease: reduction of the viral load to below the detection limit of 50 copies/ml. The IAS concluded that the likelihood of achieving this treatment goal is higher when enfuvirtide is selected as one of the two active drugs. OBJECTIVE: A panel of German experts convened to discuss the currently available data and to incorporate them into the updated German consensus recommendations for the use of enfuvirtide when switching treatment in heavily pretreated HIV patients. METHODS: The consensus recommendations are based on published data from controlled, randomised clinical studies and on the expert opinions of the discussants. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The consensus recommendations were developed to provide practice-relevant standardised recommendations for selecting suitable candidates for enfuvirtide therapy and for their management. Aspects including predictive prognostic factors, disease stage, selection of the optimised background regimen, early indicators of a response to enfuvirtide, as well as accompanying educational measures treatment were considered. New protease inhibitors or other remaining active drugs should be used together with enfuvirtide in heavily pretreated patients in order to enable at least two active drugs to be included in such a salvage regimen.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 12

SP - 93

EP - 102

JO - EUR J MED RES

JF - EUR J MED RES

SN - 0949-2321

IS - 3

M1 - 3

ER -