Dose adjustment of the non-nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitors during concurrent rifampicin-containing tuberculosis therapy: one size does not fit all
Importance of the field: HIV/tuberculosis (TB) co-infection is common and
associated with high mortality. Simultaneous highly active antiretroviral
therapy during TB treatment is associated with substantial survival benefit
but drug–drug interactions complicate NNRTI dosing.
Areas covered in this review: We reviewed the impact of rifampicin-containing
TB therapy on the NNRTIs pharmacokinetics and clinical outcome. PubMed
database was searched from 1966 to July 2009 using the terms efavirenz,
rifampicin, nevirapine, pharmacokinetics, pharmacogenetics, HIV, TB, CYP2B6,
CYP3A4 and metabolism. References from identified articles and abstracts
from meetings were also reviewed.
What the reader will gain: A comprehensive review of the literature on this
subject including pharmacokinetic and clinical studies. Most studies were
small, observational or underpowered to detect the true effect of rifampicin
on NNRTI-based therapy. None of the studies were controlled for genetic
factors and there were limited data on children.
Take home message: There were insufficient data to make definitive recommendations
about dose adjustment of the NNRTIs during rifampin-containing
therapy. Current data suggest that the standard dose of efavirenz or nevirapine
is adequate in most HIV/TB co-infected adults. However, more research is
needed in pediatric populations as well as to define role of drug–gene
interactions