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It is known that certain antiviral therapies, the socalled protease inhibitors, used in the treatment of HIV infection has an untowarded effect on the blood vessels, promoting early occurence of atherosclerosis. A a newer protease inhibitor, atazanavir, has been shown to have no negative effect on the levels of blood cholesterol and it is hypothesized that this may indicate that atazanavir is less prone to induce atherosclerosis. An early sign of atherosclerosis is a reduced vasomotion and this study investigate the influence of atazanavir on functionality of the conduit blood vessels compared to that of "standard" antiviral therapy.
Full description
Indication: Dyslipidemia Type II in HIV-Infected Patients
Primary Objectives: Change of flow-mediated dilation in the forearm after 6 months using the protease inhibitor atazanavir in a potent antiviral therapy combination compared with a combination including current proteinase inhibitor.
Secondary Objectives: Changes in plasma lipid profiles and further clinical chemistry parameters after 6 months of treatment compared to baseline.
Study Design: This is a multicenter, observer-blind (measurements of vessel parameters and statistical evaluation), treatment-controlled, randomized, study with 2 treatment groups.
Planned Total Sample Size: (40-50) eligible randomized patients (20-25 per group) from 2-5 centers.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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