Objectives: To evaluate the impact on peripheral fat tissue of a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI)-sparing regimen in lipoatrophic HIV-1 infected patients.
Methods: This 96-week prospective, randomized study compared lipoatrophic patients switched to an NRTI-sparing regimen with patients remaining on an NRTI-containing regimen. The primary endpoint was the change in thigh subcutaneous fat tissue volume between baseline and week 48, as assessed by computerized tomography.
Results: One hundred patients were included, 50 in each arm. At baseline, patients had been on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for a median time of 6.6 years (4.9-9.7); 71% of the patients had received thymidine analogues [stavudine (37%), zidovudine (34%)]. The mean change in fat volume between baseline and week 48 significantly favoured the NRTI-sparing arm over the NRTI-maintaining arm in the intent-to-treat analysis, with a last-observation-carried-forward approach [+34 cm(3); 95% confidence interval (CI) 5-63 cm(3); P=0.002]. This was confirmed in the intent-to-treat analysis of available data, with a mean difference of +109 cm(3) (95% CI 34-185 cm(3)) at week 96 (n=53; P=0.001). This corresponded to increases of 12 and 30% in fat volume at weeks 48 and 96, respectively, in the NRTI-sparing arm.
Conclusions: Switching from an effective NRTI-containing regimen to an NRTI-sparing regimen preserves immunovirological status and increases subcutaneous fat volume at weeks 48 and 96.