February 3, 1999
| Treatment Group A | |
| ARM I: | NFV + EFZ placebo + 2 NRTIs |
| ARM II: | NFV placebo + EFZ + 2 NRTIs |
| ARM III: | NFV + EFZ + 2 NRTIs |
The possible dual NRTI combinations were ddI/d4T, ddI/3TC, or d4T/3TC.
Subjects with viral loads below 500 copies were assigned to Treatment Group B and remained on their originally assigned ACTG 302/303 dual nucleoside analog therapy. A total of 195 patients were in Treatment Group A, while 41 people were in Treatment Group B. The patients' baseline median viral load was 7776 copies and mean CD4 (T-cell) count was 389 cells. Of the 195 patients on Treatment Group A, 66 were on the NFV+NRTIs arm, 65 were on the EFZ+NRTIs arm, and 64 were on the NFV+EFZ+NRTIs arm.
A total of 33 patients, or 17%, discontinued study participation during the 52 week follow-up period. The majority of the dropouts were due to treatment failure: 20 (61%) of the 33 patients (61%) had their viral load rise above 2,000, and one patient developed lymphoma. Additionally, 2 patients died while on study. One death was attributed to respiratory failure (this death occurred in the NFV arm at week 40) and the other death was a result of pancreatitis and multi-organ failure. This was reported in the EFZ arm at week 28.
Overall, 106 of 189 patients (56%) across all treatment arms at week 40-48 enjoyed viral load decreases by weeks 40-48, with the individual regimen breakdown as follows:
| Percentage of patients below 500 copies |
|
| NFV: | 35% |
| EFZ: | 60% |
| NFV + EFV: | 74% |
This result was highly statistically significant, with the NFV+EFV arm providing the most powerful anti-HIV activity, even in this highly experienced population. With regard to T-cell count increases, there were no significant differences among the three treatment arms at week 40-48, with patients enjoying a median increase of 94 cells.