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Viread

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Viread

 [vir´e-ad]
trademark for a preparation of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, an antiretroviral agent.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

tenofovir disoproxil fumarate

Viread

Pharmacologic class: Nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitor

Therapeutic class: Antiretroviral

Pregnancy risk category B

FDA Box Warning

Severe acute exacerbations of hepatitis have been reported in patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection who have discontinued anti-hepatitis B therapy. Monitor hepatic function closely with both clinical and laboratory follow-up for at least several months in patients who discontinue anti-hepatitis B therapy. If appropriate, resumption of anti-hepatitis B therapy may be warranted.

Lactic acidosis and severe hepatomegaly with steatosis, including fatal cases, have been reported with the use of nucleoside analogs, including tenofovir.

Drug should not be given with adefovir dipivoxil.

Because of risk of development of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) resistance, drug should only be used in HIV-1 and HBV co-infected patients as part of an appropriate antiretroviral combination regimen.

HIV-1 antibody testing should be offered to all HBV-infected patients before start of therapy. It is also recommended that all patients with HIV-1 infection be tested for presence of chronic HBV infection before start of drug therapy.

Drug's effects on bone haven't been studied in patients with chronic HBV infection.

In HIV-infected patients, redistribution or accumulation of body fat, including central obesity, dorsocervical fat enlargement (buffalo hump), peripheral wasting, facial wasting, breast enlargement, and cushingoid appearance, has been observed in patients receiving combination antiretroviral therapy.

Immune reconstitution syndrome has been reported in HIV-infected patients treated with combination antiretroviral therapy.

Action

Inhibits activity of HIV by competing with natural substrate deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate; disrupts cellular DNA by causing chain termination

Availability

Powder, oral: 40 mg/scoop

Tablets: 150 mg, 200 mg, 250 mg, 300 mg

Indications and dosages

HIV-1 infection, chronic hepatitis B infection

Adults and adolescents age 12 and older weighing 35 kg (77 lb) or more: 300 mg P.O. daily; for patients unable to swallow tablets, give 7.5 scoops of oral powder.

HIV-1 infection

Children ages 2 to younger than 12: 8 mg/kg (to maximum of 300 mg) P.O. once daily as oral powder or tablets

Dosage adjustment

• Baseline creatinine clearance less than 50 ml/minute

Contraindications

• None

Precautions

Use cautiously in:

• renal impairment

• lactic acidosis

• exacerbation of hepatitis, hepatomegaly with steatosis

• co-administration of adefovir dipivoxil or other tenofovir-containing products

• concurrent or recent use of nephrotoxic drugs.

• decreased bone marrow density

• redistribution or accumulation of body fat

• immune reconstitution syndrome

• elderly patients

• pregnant or breastfeeding patients

• children younger than age 2 with HIV-1 infection and younger than age 12 or less than 35 kg (77 lb) with chronic hepatitis B infection (safety and efficacy not established).

Administration

• Assess creatinine clearance before starting drug.

• Give tablets without regard to meals.

• Give oral powder with 2 to 4 oz of soft foods that can be swallowed without chewing (such as applesauce, baby food, or yogurt). Don't mix with liquids. Give dose immediately after mixing.

• Know that drug is usually given with other antiretrovirals for HIV infection.

Adverse reactions

CNS: headache, asthenia, depression

GI: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, flatulence, anorexia

GU: new-onset or worsening renal impairment (including acute renal failure and Fanconi syndrome)

Skin: rash

Hepatic: severe hepatomegaly with steatosis

Metabolic: hyperglycemia, lactic acidosis

Other: body fat redistribution, pain, immune reconstitution syndrome

Interactions

Drug-drug. Acyclovir, cidofovir, didanosine, ganciclovir, indinavir, lopinavir, probenecid, ritonavir, valacyclovir, valganciclovir, other drugs eliminated by active tubular secretion (such as adefovir dipivoxil): increased blood level of either drug

Atazanavir, lopinavir/ritonavir: increased tenofovir concentration

Drug-diagnostic tests. Alanine aminotransferase, amylase, aspartate aminotransferase, blood and urine glucose, creatine kinase, triglycerides: increased levels

Neutrophils: decreased count

Drug-food. Any food: decreased drug bioavailability and efficacy

Patient monitoring

Watch for and report signs and symptoms of lactic acidosis or hepatotoxicity.

• Monitor bone mineral density in patients with history of pathologic fractures or who are at risk for osteopenia.

Monitor for signs of immune reconstitution syndrome, especially during initial phase of combination antiretroviral treatment when patients whose immune systems respond may develop an inflammatory response to indolent or residual opportunistic infections (such as Mycobacterium avium infection, cytomegalovirus, Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia, or tuberculosis), which may necessitate further evaluation and treatment.

• Monitor kidney and liver function tests.

• Assess nutritional status and hydration in light of adverse GI reactions and underlying disease.

Patient teaching

• Tell patient to take tablets once daily at the same time every day with or without food and take oral powder at the same time every day with food.

• Tell patient not to mix oral powder with liquids. Tell patient to use only the dosing scoop supplied, to mix only with 2 to 4 oz of soft foods that can be swallowed without chewing (such as baby food, applesauce, or yogurt), and to take entire dose immediately after mixing.

Instruct patient to immediately report unusual tiredness or yellowing of skin or eyes.

• Tell patient drug may cause weakness and headache. Caution him to avoid driving and other hazardous activities until he knows how drug affects performance.

• Caution female patient not to breastfeed.

• As appropriate, review all other significant and life-threatening adverse reactions and interactions, especially those related to the drugs, tests, and foods mentioned above.

McGraw-Hill Nurse's Drug Handbook, 7th Ed. Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
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References in periodicals archive
In an integrated analysis of both studies, patients receiving Vemlidy demonstrated improvements in certain bone and renal laboratory parameters compared to those treated with Viread. In addition, no patient developed resistance to tenofovir during the studies through 96 weeks of therapy, concluded the company.
Individual factors linked to lower or higher bone density at the femoral neck Individual factors linked to lower Individual factors linked to (worse) bone density at femoral neck higher (better) bone density at femoral neck Being a woman Higher body mass index Longer treatment with tenofovir (TDF, Longer treatment with an Viread) * for HIV integrase inhibitor for HIV Older age Hypogonadism or postmenopausal status ([dagger]) No physical activity Low vitamin D AIDS wasting in the past Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection * Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) is part of the combination drugs Atripla, Complera, Stribild, and Truvada.
In 2003, Gilead acquired a struggling company called Triangle Pharmaceuticals, which produced a drug that could be combined with Viread to make Truvada, and combined this with a drug from competitor Bristol-Myers Squibb to create Atripla--the first once-a-day single tablet to treat HIV.
* Viread (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate; Gilead): Viread sees a net share gain from all but two surveyed brands.
Jeremy Duboys, president of AffordRx, is determined to combat this by offering these Viread discount cards, saying, “We are aware that millions of Americans are losing out on healthcare because prescription prices are too high.
Agenix's patented hepatitis B drug compound, AGX-1009, shares the same active compound as Gilead's (NASDAQ:GILD) blockbuster drug, Viread, which is used to treat HIV and hepatitis B.
A large-scale clinical trial evaluating whether daily use of an oral tablet or vaginal gel containing antiretroviral drugs can prevent HIV infection in women is being modified because an interim review found that the study cannot show that one of the study products, oral tenofovir, marketed under the trade name Viread, is effective.
Among 4,758 HIV serodiscordant couples in Kenya and Uganda participating in the Partners Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PREP) study, the risk of HIV infection was reduced 62% with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (Viread) (P value .0003) and 73% with tenofovir in combination with emtricitabine (Truvada) (P less than .0001) compared with placebo.
A vaginal gel containing Gilead Sciences Inc's (Foster City CA) AIDS drug Viread cut HIV infections by as much as 54% in a trial in South Africa, the first time such a product has protected women after six previous gels failed.
The gel is in limited supply; it was made for this and another ongoing study from a drug donated by California-based Gilead Sciences Inc., which sells tenofovir in pill form as Viread. The study tested it in 889 heterosexual women in and near Durban, South Africa.
Truvada or Viread are the medications used in the current PrEP trials.
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