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DMPA (depot medroxyprogesterone acetate or the 'depot' injection) is a widely used contraception. It is popular in woman with HIV as it probably still works when you take HIV drugs. HIV drugs can increase or decrease the level of other drugs (e.g. contraceptives) in your bloodstream which may make them work less well or increase side effects. It is assumed that DMPA can be given with HIV drugs there are no studies proving this.
The purpose of the study is to investigate whether an HIV drug combination containing lopinavir/ritonavir affects DMPA when they are taken at the same time.
Full description
Lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) is licensed for use in combination with other antiretrovirals for the treatment of HIV infection. Like other agents from the protease inhibitor class, LPV/r inhibits the 3A isoenzyme of the hepatic cytochrome P450 system and may increase the levels of drugs metabolised via this route. However, LPV/r has also been shown in vivo to induce its own metabolism and to increase the biotransformation of some drugs metabolized by P450 enzymes and by glucuronidation.
Women account for an increasing proportion of the HIV epidemic in the UK. The huge reductions in HIV-related mortality and morbidity associated with the use of effective combination antiretroviral therapy have led to a shift in focus to longer term issues, including reproductive health and contraception. The impact of a variety of antiretrovirals on the plasma pharmacokinetics of oral oestrogen and progesterone preparations have been investigated and in general NNRTIs and boosted PIs cause a reduction in levels of both, particularly oral oestrogen preparations. Most package inserts for combined (oestrogen and progestogen) and progestogen-only oral contraceptives recommend that additional contraceptive methods be employed with concomitant use of enzyme-inducing agents.
Injectable contraception provides highly effective contraception without the need for daily pill taking, an important factor to consider for individuals already taking regular medication. Depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) is the most frequently prescribed injectable method. DMPA, like other progestogens, is metabolised by the cytochrome P450 system but interaction studies in women on antiretrovirals are limited. A study of 59 women on DMPA contraception plus an unboosted PI (nelfinavir) or an NNRTI (efavirenz or nevirapine) measured DMPA levels and compared them with 16 women on either no therapy or NRTIs only (no potential for drug interaction). DMPA levels were similar in all groups and suppression of ovulation over a 12 week period was also similar in all groups.
Although the high levels of DMPA achieved over the dosing interval make any pharmacokinetic interaction unlikely to be clinically significant, some clinicians advise a reduction in the interval between DMPA injections from 12 to 10 weeks in patients on an NNRTI or boosted PI; there is no clear evidence to support this approach. Although the described study supports normal dosing intervals for women on an NNRTI, the unboosted PI nelfinavir is not recommended as standard of care and the impact of ritonavir-boosted PIs is unclear. The summary of product characteristics for DMPA advises a normal dosing interval even when using a potent enzyme inducers, suggesting no additional intervention is required when prescribing a boosted PI. Formal pharmacokinetic data is crucial to clarify this important area.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Any serious or active medical or psychiatric illness which, in the opinion of the investigator, would interfere with subject treatment, assessment, or compliance with the protocol. This would include any active clinically significant renal, cardiac, hepatic, pulmonary, vascular, metabolic disorders or malignancy.
Have a body mass index (BMI) >35
Personal history of venous thromboembolism (VTE) or pulmonary embolism (PE)
Presence of any current active AIDS defining illness (Category C conditions in the CDC Classification System for HIV 1993) except stable cutaneous Kaposi's Sarcoma
Osteoporosis or significant risk factors for osteoporosis (alcohol abuse, long-term anticonvulsants/corticosteroids, BMI less than 18, eating disorder, previous low trauma fracture, significant family history osteoporosis)
Conditions for which DMPA is contra-indicated or risks outweigh benefits:
Clinically relevant alcohol or drug use (positive urine drug screen, excluding cannabinoids) or history of alcohol or drug use considered by the Investigator to be sufficient to hinder compliance, follow-up procedures or evaluation of adverse events. Smoking is permitted, but tobacco intake should remain consistent throughout the study.
The use of disallowed concomitant therapy (See section 5.2).
Previous allergy to any of the constituents of the study pharmaceuticals.
Exposure to any investigational drug or placebo within 4 weeks of baseline.
Any HAART exposure within 6 months of screening for this study (ie participants need to be treatment-naïve or on a treatment interruption for 6 months or more).
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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