Skip to main content

Rilpivirine use in the Swiss HIV cohort study: a prospective cohort study

Abstract

Background

Rilpivirine is safe and effective in HIV-naïve patients with low baseline HIV-RNA or in switch strategy. It offers the advantages of few drug-drug interactions and a favourable toxicity profile. We aimed to determine the reasons for prescribing the rilpivirine (RPV)/tenofovir disoproxil (TDF)/emtricitabine (FTC) co-formulation within the Swiss HIV Cohort Study and to assess its effectiveness and safety over a 24 months period.

Methods

All individuals enrolled in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study who initiated a RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation between April 2013 and March 2014 were included. Primary outcomes were the HIV-RNA viral load (copies/mL) and CD4 cell count (cells/mm3) at 6, 12 and 24 months. Reasons for a switch to RPV/TDF/FTC were evaluated through a standardized questionnaire. We also assessed discontinuation and reasons for discontinuation of RPV/TDF/FTC until October 30, 2015.

Results

Of 644 individuals who started the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation, only 7.5% were treatment-naïve. At 24 months, viral suppression (HIV-RNA <50 copies/mL) was achieved in 100% and 96.7% of cART-naïve and cART-experienced patients respectively. The switch to RPV was mainly done for simplification (44.6%) and to overcome central nervous system toxicity symptoms due to efavirenz (24%). Six months after switch, 74.8% of patients reported an improvement of psycho-neurological symptoms with continued improvement at 12 months for almost 80%. However, one quarter of patients reported a discontinuation of RPV/TDF/FTC on October 30, 2015 after a median time of 18.4 months. Reasons for discontinuation included physician decision (5.3%) and side-effects (3.9%) mainly related to the central nervous system and to renal toxicity.

Conclusion

The RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation was safe and effective throughout 24 months of follow-up but barely prescribed for HIV-naïve patients. Despite excellent virological suppression among both treatment-naïve and -experienced patients, we observed a high rate of treatment discontinuation.

Peer Review reports

Background

The combination of rilpivirine (RPV), tenofovir disoproxil (TDF) and emtricitabine (FTC) has demonstrated non-inferior efficacy in randomized controlled trials compared to efavirenz (EFV)-based regimens among HIV-infected, treatment-naïve patients with a baseline viral load of less than 105 copies/mL [1,2,3,4]. RPV/TDF/FTC has also demonstrated efficacy in interventional [5] and observational [6,7,8,9,10,11] studies among treatment-experienced virologically suppressed patients switching to RPV. Current strategies with combined antiretroviral treatment (cART) focus on efficacy and safety in an aging HIV population with multiple comorbidities requiring additional treatments [12]. In this setting, RPV offers the advantages of few drug-drug interactions [13] and a favourable toxicity profile with a low incidence of grade 2–4 side-effects [14, 15]. In particular, fewer discontinuations due to central nervous system (CNS) adverse events in patients receiving RPV were reported compared to patients on EFV-based regimens [16]. Of note, EFV-related CNS toxicity has prompted its removal as a first-line regimen from several international guidelines in favour of integrase inhibitors, protease inhibitors [17] or RPV [18]. An improvement of lipid parameters was also observed with RPV compared to EFV or protease inhibitors, with a decrease in total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides [4, 5].

RPV, co-formulated with TDF and FTC in a single tablet, was initially approved in Switzerland on April 1, 2013, for the treatment of HIV-naïve patients with a viral load less than 105 copies/ml. Our experience suggested that the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation was used among virologically suppressed cART-experienced patients in a switch strategy, either to reduce adverse events due to the current regimen or for treatment simplification. We sought to evaluate the reasons for the prescription, as well as for discontinuation, of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation in participants in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS) after it entered the Swiss market. In addition, we assessed its effectiveness and safety at 6 (M6), 12 (M12) and 24 months (M24) post-initiation under routine clinical conditions.

Methods

Study design and patient population

We conducted a prospective analysis among all HIV-1 infected adults ≥18 years old participating in the SHCS who received at least one dose of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation between April 1, 2013, and March 31, 2014. The SHCS is a multicentre prospective study established in 1988 and continuously enrolling HIV-infected individuals [19]. In brief, patients receive HIV care at one of the 7 outpatient clinics of the SHCS (Basel, Bern, Geneva, Lausanne, Lugano, St. Gallen, Zurich), at participating regional hospitals, or from collaborating private physicians. Follow-up visits are scheduled on a 6-monthly basis and include physical assessment, adherence check, review of medical conditions and drug prescriptions, as well as laboratory examinations [20]. Approximately 75% of all HIV infected patients on cART in Switzerland are followed within the SHCS network [21]. The scientific board of the SHCS approved this prospective analysis and all patients signed an informed consent form before enrolment in the SHCS.

Variables

Primary outcomes assessed treatment effectiveness through the HIV-RNA viral load (copies/mL) and CD4 cell count (cells/mm3) measured at M6, M12 and M24 following initiation of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation. We defined virological suppression as HIV-RNA <50 copies/mL. Secondary outcomes assessed treatment safety and used total cholesterol (mmol/L), high-density lipoprotein (mmol/L), triglycerides (mmol/L), alanine aminotransferase (UI/L), creatinine (μmol/L), and the estimated glomerular function rate (eGFR) (ml/min/1.73 m2) calculated according to the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease equation, as well as body mass index (kg/m2). Sociodemographic and clinical data were prospectively collected as part of the SHCS 6-monthly assessments at the time of initiation of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation (referred to as baseline) and at M6, M12 and M24.

Reasons for switching to RPV/TDF/FTC were collected retrospectively. From January 1, 2015, onwards, the HIV Cohorts Data Exchange Protocol (HICDEP) coding [22] was used to document treatment switches in the SHCS database. However, before this date, treating physicians did not have the possibility to code regimen changes intended to simplify treatment. To obtain these data, we conducted a survey among treating physicians of all patients included in our study. We created a standardized questionnaire with a closed list of reasons for switching, which was first evaluated to assess its reliability among 6 physicians at the HIV unit of Geneva University Hospitals. The questionnaire was then sent to all physicians participating in the SHCS who had switched their patients to the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation. When physicians declared the reason for the switch as “toxicity, predominantly from CNS”, they were asked to give the exact reasons from a list of CNS-specific symptoms: i) symptoms of depression; ii) sleep disturbances/insomnia; iii) abnormal dreams; iv) dizziness/vertigo; v) fatigue/tiredness; and vi) other. Physicians were also required to document CNS symptoms at M6 and M12 after the switch as “worsening”, “stable”, “improvement”, “not available” or “other”.

In addition, we assessed a cross-section of patients who had discontinued the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation within M24 post-treatment initiation in both the treatment-naïve and -experienced groups and the reasons for discontinuation according to the HICDEP coding registered in the SHCS database.

Statistical analysis

We differentiated two groups of patients: those who started RPV/TDF/FTC as a first-line regimen (cART-naïve patients) and those who switched from any cART regimen to RPV/TDF/FTC (cART-experienced patients).

We assessed if virological suppression were different across the 3 time-points (M6, M12 and M24) compared to baseline values among cART-experienced and among cART-naïve patients separately. To take into account the repetition of measurement in the same subject, we developed a generalized estimating equation using the binomial family, and exchangeable correlation structure. All models were adjusted for gender, age, history of AIDS event, HCV and HBV positivity. Then we used a linear multilevel model with a random effect on the patient to compare the evolution of the CD4 count across the 3 time-points compared to baseline values first among cART-experienced then among cART-naïve patients. We adjusted both models for the same variables described above plus the CD4 nadir (<50, 50–99, 100–199, 200–349, 350–499 and > = 500) and viral load (<= or >50 copies/mL). For safety parameters, we performed linear multilevel models with a random effect on the patient to compare the evolution of each parameter across the 3 time-points compared to baseline values. Again we performed the analyses separately in cART-experienced then in cART-naïve patients, and adjusted for gender, age, history of AIDS event, HCV and HBV positivity. We repeated the three models assessing the evolution of lipids (one model for cholesterol, triglycerides and finally HDL-cholesterol) across the 3 time-points compared to baseline values in the subgroup of cART-experienced patients previously treated with 2 NRTIs and one PI.

P values were calculated from generalized estimating equation (for viral load) and linear multilevel models (CD4, ALAT, creatinine, eGFR, cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL-cholesterol and BMI) comparing data at M6, M12 and M24 to baseline among cART-naïve then among cART-experienced patients, after adjustment for confounders described above.

Finally, we reported the proportions of cART-experienced and -naïve patients who discontinued the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation before October 30, 2015, and described the reasons.

All P values reported were two-sided and the level of significance was set at 0.05. Statistical analyses were conducted in STATA software, version 14 (StataCorp LP, College Station, TX, USA).

Results

Baseline characteristics of patients initiating RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation

Between April 1, 2013, and March 31, 2014, 644 HIV-infected patients enrolled in the SHCS started the new RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation. Most were male (70%; 451/644), Caucasian (73.9%; 476/644), and men who have sex with men (MSM) (47.7%; 307/644). Mean duration of HIV infection was 11 years (± standard deviation [SD]: 7.8) and mean age, 45.8 years (± 11.0 years); mean CD4 cell count at baseline and mean CD4 nadir were 637 (± 271) and 283 cells/mm3 (± 186), respectively. Among the 644 patients, 48 (7.5%) were cART-naïve at initiation of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation, representing 10.5% of the total number of HIV-naïve patients enrolled in the SHCS and initiated cART during the same time period (n = 456). The baseline characteristics of patients initiating the co-formulation are shown in Table 1 and are presented for cART naïve and experienced patients. Among cART experienced patients, 44 (7.4%) were not fully virologically suppressed (HIV-RNA > 50 copies/mL, mean HIV-RNA 16629 copies/mL) at the time of the switch.

Table 1 Demographic, clinical, immunological and virological baseline characteristics of patients initiating RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation between April 1, 2013, and March 31, 2014

Reasons for a switch to RPV/TDF/FTC in cART-experienced patients

The study questionnaire was sent to the SHCS treating physicians in November 2014. At that time, we had identified 598 patients who were switched to RPV/TDF/FTC during the study period. Four patients were excluded as one did not receive the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation and 3 were cART-naïve according to the treating physicians. The non-response rate was 9.5% (57/598 questionnaires). For these 57 patients, as well as two additional patients identified later and without a questionnaire, we retained the reason for the switch as registered in the SHCS database. The mean duration of cART treatment at the time of switch was 8.7 years (SD: ±5.9). Before switching, 47.8% (285/596) of cART-experienced patients were on a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-based regimen, 26.2% (156/596) were on a protease inhibitor-based regimen, and 9.7% (58/596) were on an integrase inhibitor-based regimen. Of those on a NNRTI regimen, two thirds (192/285) were on EFV. Regimens before switch and reasons for switch are presented in Table 2. Treatment simplification (266/596; 44.6%) and CNS toxicity (143/596; 24.0%) were the two main reasons for switch.

Table 2 Previous regimens at time of switch and main reasons for switch among the 596 cART-experienced patients initiating a RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation

CNS toxicity was the reason for the switch for 126 patients on an EFV-based regimen (65.6%; 126/192) with a description of symptoms available for 123 patients (Table 3). Among these, 60.2% (74/123 patients) had more than one symptom, and a total of 197 CNS adverse events were reported: insomnia/sleep disturbances (26.9%; 53/197); abnormal dreams (18.8%; 37/197); depression (17.3%; 34/197); dizziness (15.2%; 30/197); fatigue/tiredness (13.7%; 27/197); and other reasons (8.1%; 16/197). Six months after the switch from EFV to RPV, 74.8% (92/123) of patients reported an improvement of CNS symptoms, 14.6% (18/123) reported a stable condition and 3.2% (4/123) described worsening CNS side effects. Continuous improvement in CNS symptoms at M12 was reported for 78.3% of patients for whom we had data (72/92) while condition remained stable for 6.5% (6/92) of patients.

Table 3 Central nervous system (CNS) adverse events experienced by the 123 patients on EFV-based regimens reporting CNS symptoms prior to switch and change over time on RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation

Effectiveness and safety of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation

Effectiveness and safety variables over time are presented both for treatment-naïve and –experienced patients in Table 4. Viral suppression (HIV-RNA < 50 copies/mL) was achieved among 93.8%, 97.6% and 100% of the cART naive patients at M6, M12 and M24 respectively (P < 0.001). At M24, 13 patients in the cART experienced group did not meet the criteria for virological suppression, i.e. HIV-RNA <50 /mL. These 13 patients were switched mostly from a PI regimen (46%, 6/13) and from a NNRTI regimen (38.5%, 5/13). Genotype was available for the 6 patients failing with an HIV-RNA ≥ 200 copies/mL: 3 patients had a mutation conferring resistance to RPV at the time of virological failure, either 138A/K, 188 L or 221Y mutation. One of these 3 patients was not fully suppressed and already had developed a 188 L mutation at the time of the switch to RPV. Figure 1 shows the number of cART naive and experienced patients discontinuating RPV/TDF/FTC combination for virological failure or other reasons.

Table 4 Efficacy and safety parameters (mean values ±standard deviation, median) at M6, M12 and M24 after initiation (baseline) of a RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation among cART-naïve and cART-experienced patients
Fig. 1
figure 1

Flowchart of patients initiating RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation, discontinuation and treatment failures. *Discontinuation for other reasons than virological failure Vl viral load, cART combined antiretroviral therapy

CD4 count significantly increased at M6, at M12 and at M24 compared to baseline values in both cART naive and experienced patients (Table 4).

For safety, we found that creatinine values significantly increased across the 3 time-points, M6, M12 and M24, in cART-experienced patients (P < 0.001) but not in cART-naive patients. However, the creatinine clearance (or eGFR) decreased over time in both groups. Total cholesterol, triglycerides and HDL-cholesterol significantly decreased over time among cART-experienced patients (Table 4). When considering the subgroup of patients on PI-based regimen before the switch to RPV/TDF/FTC, cholesterol decreased significantly at M6 (mean 4.64 ± 0.96 SD, median 4.5) and M12 (4.64 ± 0.94, 4.55) compared to baseline values (5.09 ± 0.98 SD, median 5.01, p < 0.001). Similarly, HDL-cholesterol decreased significantly at M6 (1.25 ± 0.37 SD, median 1.17) and M12 (1.26 ± 0.38 SD, median 1.20) compared to baseline values (1.31 ± 0.40 SD, median 1.20, p = 0.004). Triglycerides decreased significantly across time (M6: 1.41 ± 1.01 SD, median 1.20; M12: 1.40 ± 1.07 SD, median 1.12) compared to baseline (1.73 ± 1.21 SD, median 1.50, p < 0.001) but at M24 values were not significantly different from those at baseline (1.50 ± 1.20, 1.10, p = 0.516).

Follow-up on October 30, 2015

On October 30, 2015, we assessed all patients who initiated a RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation between March 2013 and April 2014. The median follow-up time since RPV/TDF/FTC initiation was 18.4 months (interquartile range: 14.0–21.9). Overall, 166/644 (25.8%) patients had discontinued the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation on October 30, 2015 (Table 5).

Table 5 cART-experienced and cART-naïve RPV/TDF/FTC patients who discontinued treatment between April 2014 and October 2015; reasons for discontinuation and next cART regimen

Besides treatment failure as described above, the most common reasons provided for discontinuation were unknown (62/644; 9.6% of all patients); physician decision with no reason specified (34/644; 5.3%); patient request (12/644; 1.9%); and CNS toxicity (10/644; 1.6%). Among the 10 patients who discontinued RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation for CNS side effects, all were cART-experienced patients with 3 of them previously receiving EFV and who had already switched to RPV/TDF/FTC for the same reason. There were no deaths among the study population. Of the 166 discontinuations, more than half (n = 92; 55.4%) had discontinued the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation for an integrase inhibitor-based regimen. Of these switches, 44.9% (45/92) switched to co-formulations including dolutegravir or elvitegravir.

Discussion

We demonstrated that rilpivirine, tenofovir disoproxil and emtricitabine in a fixed dose combination is an effective cART regimen in both treatment-experienced and -naïve patients under routine clinical conditions, although RPV was rarely used in naïve patients. Ninety-six percent of treatment-experienced patients and 100 % of treatment-naïve patients were virologically suppressed at M24. Our findings are similar to clinical trials that showed 84–86% of virological success for RPV/TDF/FTC at M12 [3, 4] and 84% at M24 [23] in naïve patients, and 85.8% of virological success for RPV at M12 in experienced patients [5]. Our results are also consistent with observational studies assessing a treatment switch to RPV (>93% of virological success of RPV at M12) [6, 7], but none of them assessed the use of RPV among naïve patients under routine clinical care. Only one observational study reported a lower proportion of virological suppression at M12; results were explained by an inappropriate switch to a RPV-containing regimen in patients with previous virological failure and by missing data [11]. In our study, 13 treatment-experienced patients had an HIV-RNA above 50 copies/ml at M24. We were able to obtain genotypic data in the 6 patients failing with an HIV-RNA ≥ 200 copies/mL: 3 patients carried 138A/K, 188 L or 221Y mutations at the time of failure, mutations that are known to confer resistance to RPV [24]. One patient had a detectable viral load and had already developed a 188 L mutation at the time of switch and should have not received the RPV/TDF/FTC combination. The rate of confirmed treatment failure was therefore very low in our study and detectable HIV-RNA may translate blips in viral load or poor adherence rather than virological failure.

Among cART-experienced patients, the main reasons for a switch to the newly marketed RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation were treatment simplification and CNS toxicity. The proportion of patients switching to RPV for simplification is slightly lower than in other observational studies [6, 11]. Unlike previous reports [6, 7, 11], we accurately assessed the reasons for a switch to RPV with a dedicated detailed questionnaire. Due to the retrospective manner and a non-response rate of 9.5% to our standardized questionnaire, it is possible that the simplification reason was underreported or rather stated as “physician decision” or “patient request”. Among those who switched because of CNS toxicity, most were on an EFV-based regimen. Symptoms did improve in approximately 75% of patients 6 months after the switch with a continuous improvement at M12. Moreover, only 3 patients switched from EFV to RPV/TDF/FTC later discontinued RPV co-formulation for persisting CNS side effects. While there was no change in neurocognitive functions after EFV replacement for a PI drug in a small controlled trial enrolling 16 patients [25], another observational study confirmed improvement in neurological side-effects in almost 50% of patients switching from an EFV-based regimen to RPV [6]. Switch from EFV to RPV seems therefore a reasonable and sustainable option for patients experiencing CNS side effects on EFV.

Overall, the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation was safe and well tolerated in most patients. As shown in previous studies [6, 7, 11], we observed a significant increase in creatinine over time among our study population, but this difference was not clinically relevant. Rilpivirine is known to inhibit the creatinine transporter in the proximal renal tubule [13]. Similarly to other studies [6, 7, 11], we did observe a significant change in the lipid profile of treatment-experienced patients after the switch to RPV/TDF/FTC. This was also true for the subset of patients previously on PI. However, there was no effect of RPV/TDF/FTC on lipid profile over time among cART-naïve patients; this may be due to the small number of treatment naïve subjects included and the lack of power to detect an effect.

Despite good results for the effectiveness and tolerability of the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation, a quarter of patients changed their ART regimen, mainly upon physician decision, after a mean time of 18.4 months. This is much shorter than the reported mean duration of patients on first- and second-line newer cART regimens (4.6 and 3.9 years, respectively) in the 2008–2011 period as described in the HIV Outpatient Study [26]. We hypothesized that there is a low confidence in the RPV genetic barrier among treating physicians [27], particularly when compared to newer once-daily, inhibitor-based co-formulation regimens, the latest being marketed in Switzerland only 2 years after the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation. The need for a fatty meal intake may be also a barrier to the large-scale prescription of this regimen although the acceptability of food constraint was not formally assessed in our study. Finally, less than 5% of patients discontinued the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation due to side-effects, mainly CNS-related symptoms and kidney toxicity. Neuropsychiatric adverse events due to RPV were described in up to 27% of naïve patients receiving 48 weeks of RPV in clinical trials, but discontinuation was rare [16]. In our study, discontinuation of RPV for CNS toxicity (1.6%) was much lower than discontinuation of EFV for the same reason (65.6%). It is also lower than discontinuation rates reported on dolutegravir in routine clinical settings, which ranged between 3.4% and 6% [28].

Although we included a small number of cART-naïve patients, our study is the first to report on treatment outcomes up to 24 months under routine clinical conditions in this population. This may provide the necessary confidence to clinicians to prescribe the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation to HIV-naïve patients if the virological criteria are met, and providing that the patient consents to comply with the dietary restrictions.

Our study has several limitations. First, the standardized questionnaire on the reasons for a switch to the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation was retrospective and therefore subject to recall bias, particularly regarding the possible over-reporting of CNS toxicity symptoms and their improvement after a switch from EFV to RPV. Second, the study population was mainly Caucasian, male, and MSM, which renders more difficult the generalizability of our results to under-represented transmission groups. Finally, we did not compare initiation to RPV/TDC/FTC co-formulation to starts and switches to alternative regimens during the same time period.

Conclusions

The use of RPV is safe and effective under routine clinical conditions, both in a switch strategy and in naïve patients. Our study supports policy changes made in Switzerland in October 2014 to use RPV for cART-experienced virologically suppressed patients. RPV demonstrates a favourable neurological toxicity profile with most patients experiencing CNS side effects on EFV improving after a switch to RPV and very low discontinuation rate for CNS events when compared to EFV or integrase inhibitor. Future research should focus on comparing the RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation with newer available regimens containing integrase inhibitors in a switch strategy, including an assessment of cost-effectiveness. The reasons for early discontinuation of RPV/TDF/FTC co-formulation based on physician decision in the SHCS should also be further explored.

Abbreviations

AIDS:

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome

cART:

Combined antiretroviral therapy

CNS:

Central nervous system

EFV:

Efavirenz

eGRF:

Estimated glomerular function rate

FTC:

Emtricitabine

HBV:

Hepatitis B virus

HCV:

Hepatitis C virus

HICDEP:

HIV Cohorts Data Exchange Protocol

HIV:

Human immunodeficiency virus

M12:

Month 12

M24:

Month 24

M6:

Month 6

MSM:

Men who have sex with men

RPV:

Rilpivirine

SHCS:

Swiss HIV cohort study

TDF:

Tenofovir

References

  1. Cohen CJ, Andrade-Villanueva J, Clotet B, et al. Rilpivirine versus efavirenz with two background nucleoside or nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors in treatment-naive adults infected with HIV-1 (THRIVE): a phase 3, randomised, non-inferiority trial. Lancet. Jul 16 2011;378(9787):229–237.

  2. Molina JM, Cahn P, Grinsztejn B, et al. Rilpivirine versus efavirenz with tenofovir and emtricitabine in treatment-naive adults infected with HIV-1 (ECHO): a phase 3 randomised double-blind active-controlled trial. Lancet. Jul 16 2011;378(9787):238–246.

  3. Cohen C, Wohl D, Arribas JR, et al. Week 48 results from a randomized clinical trial of rilpivirine/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate vs. efavirenz/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate in treatment-naive HIV-1-infected adults. AIDS. Apr 24 2014;28(7):989–997.

  4. Cohen CJ, Molina JM, Cahn P, et al. Efficacy and safety of rilpivirine (TMC278) versus efavirenz at 48 weeks in treatment-naive HIV-1-infected patients: pooled results from the phase 3 double-blind randomized ECHO and THRIVE Trials. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. May 1 2012;60(1):33–42.

  5. Palella FJ, Jr., Fisher M, Tebas P, et al. Simplification to rilpivirine/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate from ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor antiretroviral therapy in a randomized trial of HIV-1 RNA-suppressed participants. AIDS. Jan 28 2014;28(3):335–344.

  6. Cazanave C, Reigadas S, Mazubert C, et al. Switch to Rilpivirine/Emtricitabine/Tenofovir Single-Tablet Regimen of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 RNA-Suppressed Patients, Agence Nationale de Recherches sur le SIDA et les Hepatites Virales CO3 Aquitaine Cohort, 2012–2014. Open Forum Infect Dis. Jan 2015;2(1):ofv018.

  7. Pinnetti C, Di Giambenedetto S, Maggiolo F, et al. Switching to Coformulated Rilpivirine/Emtricitabine/Tenofovir in Virologically Suppressed Patients: Data From a Multicenter Cohort. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. Dec 1 2015;70(4):e147–e150.

  8. Mills AM, Cohen C, Dejesus E, et al. Efficacy and safety 48 weeks after switching from efavirenz to rilpivirine using emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate-based single-tablet regimens. HIV Clin Trials. Sep-Oct 2013;14(5):216–23.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  9. Allavena C, Dailly E, Reliquet V, et al. Switching from tenofovir/emtricitabine and nevirapine to a tenofovir/emtricitabine/rilpivirine single-tablet regimen in virologically suppressed, HIV-1-infected subjects. J Antimicrob Chemother. Oct 2014;69(10):2804–8.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  10. Rokx C, Verbon A, Rijnders BJ. Successful switch to rilpivirine/tenofovir/emtricitabine in HIV-1-infected patients with an isolated K103N mutation acquired during prior nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor therapy. HIV Med. Nov 2014;15(10):611–4.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Gazaignes S, Resche-Rigon M, Gatey C, et al. Efficacy and safety of a switch to rilpivirine-based regimens in treatment-experienced HIV-1-infected patients: a cohort study. Antivir Ther. 2016;21(4):329–36.

  12. Schouten J, Wit FW, Stolte IG, et al. Cross-sectional comparison of the prevalence of age-associated comorbidities and their risk factors between HIV-infected and uninfected individuals: the AGEhIV cohort study. Clin Infect Dis. Dec 15 2014;59(12):1787–1797.

  13. Imaz A, Podzamczer D. The role of rilpivirine in clinical practice: strengths and weaknesses of the new nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor for HIV therapy. AIDS Rev. Oct-Dec 2012;14(4):268–78.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  14. Molina JM, Clumeck N, Orkin C, Rimsky LT, Vanveggel S, Stevens M. Week 96 analysis of rilpivirine or efavirenz in HIV-1-infected patients with baseline viral load </= 100 000 copies/mL in the pooled ECHO and THRIVE phase 3, randomized, double-blind trials. HIV Med. Jan 2013;15(1):57–62.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  15. Nelson MR, Elion RA, Cohen CJ, et al. Rilpivirine versus efavirenz in HIV-1-infected subjects receiving emtricitabine/tenofovir DF: pooled 96-week data from ECHO and THRIVE studies. HIV Clin Trials. May-Jun 2013;14(3):81–91.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Mills AM, Antinori A, Clotet B, et al. Neurological and psychiatric tolerability of rilpivirine (TMC278) vs. efavirenz in treatment-naive, HIV-1-infected patients at 48 weeks. HIV Med. Aug 2013;14(7):391–400.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  17. National Institute of Health. Guidelines for the USe of Antiretroviral Agents in HIV-1-Infected Adults and Adolescents 2015. https://aidsinfo.nih.gov/contentfiles/lvguidelines/AA_Recommendations.pdf. Accessed 20 November 2015.

  18. European AIDS Clinical Society. Guidelines Version 8.0 October 2015. 2015. http://www.eacsociety.org/files/2015_eacsguidelines_8.0-english_revised-20151104.pdf. Accessed 20 November 2015.

  19. Swiss HIV Cohort Study. about SHCS. http://www.shcs.ch/157-about-shcs. Accessed 20 November 2015.

  20. Schoeni-Affolter F, Ledergerber B, Rickenbach M, et al. Cohort profile: the Swiss HIV cohort study. Int J Epidemiol. Oct 2010;39(5):1179–89.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  21. Kohler P, Schmidt AJ, Cavassini M, et al. The HIV care cascade in Switzerland: reaching the UNAIDS/WHO targets for patients diagnosed with HIV. AIDS. 2015;29(18):2509–15.

  22. EuroCoord. HICDEP 1.60. 2012; http://www.hicdep.org/wiki/Hicdep_1.60. Accessed 01 December 2015.

  23. Behrens G, Rijnders B, Nelson M, et al. Rilpivirine versus efavirenz with emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate in treatment-naive HIV-1-infected patients with HIV-1 RNA </=100,000 copies/mL: week 96 pooled ECHO/THRIVE subanalysis. AIDS Patient Care STDs. Apr 2014;28(4):168–75.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  24. Sluis-Cremer N, Wainberg MA, Schinazi RF. Resistance to reverse transcriptase inhibitors used in the treatment and prevention of HIV-1 infection. Future Microbiol. 2015;10(11):1773–82.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  25. Payne B, Chadwick TJ, Blamire A, et al. Does efavirenz replacement improve neurological function in treated HIV infection? HIV Med. 2017. doi:10.1111/hiv.12503.

  26. Sheth AN, Ofotokun I, Buchacz K, et al. Antiretroviral Regimen Durability and Success in Treatment-Naive and Treatment-Experienced Patients by Year of Treatment Initiation, United States, 1996–2011. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. Jan 1 2016;71(1):47–56.

  27. Porter DP, Kulkarni R, Fralich T, Miller MD, White KL. 96-week resistance analyses of the STaR study: rilpivirine/emtricitabine/tenofovir DF versus efavirenz/emtricitabine/tenofovir DF in antiretroviral-naive, HIV-1-infected subjects. HIV Clin Trials. Jan-Feb 2015;16(1):30–8.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  28. Menard A, Montagnac C, Solas C, et al. Neuropsychiatric adverse effects on dolutegravir: an emerging concern in Europe. AIDS. May 15 2017;31(8):1201–1203.

Download references

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Rickenbach M and Schöni-Affolter F for retrieving data from the SHCS database, and all members of the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS): Aubert V, Battegay M, Bernasconi E, Böni J, Bucher HC, Burton-Jeangros C, Calmy A, Cavassini M, Dollenmaier G, Egger M, Elzi L, Fehr J, Fellay J, Furrer H (Chairman, Clinical and Laboratory Committee), Fux CA, Gorgievski M, Günthard H (President, SHCS), Haerry D (deputy of “Positive Council”), Hasse B, Hirsch HH, Hoffmann M, Hösli I, Kahlert C, Kaiser L, Keiser O, Klimkait T, Kouyos R, Kovari H, Ledergerber B, Martinetti G, Martinez de Tejada B, Metzner K, Müller N, Nadal D, Nicca D, Pantaleo G, Rauch A (Chairman, Scientific Board), Regenass S, Rickenbach M (Head, Data Centre), Rudin C (Chairman, Mother & Child Substudy), Schöni-Affolter F, Schmid P, Schüpbach J, Speck R, Tarr P, Telenti A, Trkola A, Vernazza P, Weber R, Yerly S. The data are gathered by the 5 Swiss university hospitals, 2 cantonal hospitals, 15 affiliated hospitals, and 36 private physicians (lhttp://www.shcs.ch/180-health-care-providers).

Funding

The study was sponsored by the Swiss HIV Cohort Study with a grant from Gilead Sciences.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets used and analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Consortia

Contributions

DS, AC, BE and AGA conceived the study and the analyses. DS, AC and BE conducted reviews to inform model parameters. AGA conducted the analyses. DS wrote the manuscript. JF, CH, PS, MB, MC, EB and AC contributed to the acquisition of data. JF, PS, MB and MC also made substantial contributions to the conception and design of the study protocol. All authors contributed to the revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Delphine Sculier.

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The Swiss HIV Cohort Study has been approved by the “Commission Cantonale d’Ethique de la Recherche de Genève” which belongs to the “Département de l’emploi, des affaires sociales et de la santé de la République et Canton de Genève”. This prospective analysis was done using SHCS data and was approved by the scientific board of the SHCS on July 2014. All patients signed the informed consent form before enrolment in the SHCS.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The study was sponsored by the SHCS with a grant from Gilead Sciences. Gilead Sciences had no role in data collection, in data analysis, or interpretation. D.S. has participated to one advisory board meeting for Gilead Sciences. A.C. received an institutional unrestricted educational grant from Gilead Sciences to support the funding of activities in the Geneva area.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Sculier, D., Gayet-Ageron, A., Battegay, M. et al. Rilpivirine use in the Swiss HIV cohort study: a prospective cohort study. BMC Infect Dis 17, 476 (2017). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s12879-017-2579-2

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s12879-017-2579-2

Keywords