Socio-Demographic, Nutritional and Adherence as Determinants of Nevirapine Plasma Concentration among HIV-1 Patients from Two Geographically Defined Regions of Kenya
Date
2020-10Author
Mungiria, Juster
Gitonga, Lucy
Muraya, Moses
Mwaniki, John
Ngayo, Musa Otieno
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Data are skewed on the role of Socio-demographic, nutritional and adherence related factors on
the influence of nevirapine plasma concentrations among Kenyan population. This study rigorously determined
these three factors on nevirapine plasma concentrations among HIV patients receiving HIV treatment in two
regions known for high prevalence of HIV and long duration of ART uptake.Methods: Blood samples were
collected from 377 consenting HIV adult patients receiving an NVP-based first-line ART regimen. A detailed
sociodemographic questionnaire was administered. NVP plasma concentration was measured by liquid
chromatography - tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Results: The majority (59.2%) of the patients were
female, 72.2% were from western Kenya (predominantly Nilotic speaking community). The patients’ mean age
was 41.6 (SD ± 11.5) years and the mean duration of ART was 5.1 (SD ± 4.8) years. The median BMI of the
patients was 25 kg/m2
(IQR = 22.2 - 28.7 kg/m2
). The majority 81.2% were receiving 3TC/NVP/TDF ART
regimen, 30% had changed their initial ART regimen with 54.4% reporting missing taking current ARVs.
Overall NVP plasma levels ranged from 4-44207 ng/mL (median 6213 ng/mL, IQR 3097–8606.5 ng/mL). There
were 105 (25.5%) participants with NVP levels of <3100 ng/mL, associated with poor viral suppression.
Multivariate linear regression analysis showed region of origin (adjusted β 976, 95% CI, 183.2 to 1768.82; p =
0.016), gender (adjusted β 670, 95% CI, 293.6 to 1634.2; p = 0.047), education level (adjusted β -39.0779, 95%
CI, -39.07 to 1085.7; p = 0.068), initial ART regimen type (adjusted β = -548.1, 95% C = -904.2 to -192; p
=0.003) and ARV uptake in the past 30 days (adjusted β = -1109, 95% C = -2135 to -83; p =0.034) remained
independently associated with NVP plasma levels.Conclusion: NVP plasma concentration is highly
heterogenous among Kenyan population with a significant proportion of patients reporting levels of <3100 ng/ml,
correlated with poor viral suppression. The host pharmacoecologic factors, such as gender, age, weight,
education level, region of origin (ethnicity), ART regimen type and adherence, are key in influencing NVP
plasma concentration. Taking these factors into consideration, HIV treatment may be personalized to achieve
optimal treatment success.
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