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The Body Covers: The 6th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections

Abstract No. 603: Resistance Profile and Drug Combination Studies of an HIV-1 Protease Inhibitor BMS-232632

Coverage provided by Jim Thommes, M.D.

February 3, 1999

This presentation by Gong and colleagues at Bristol-Myers Squibb provides in vitro data of a new protease inhibitor in development that promises desirable features of once daily dosing, good tolerability and a resistance profile that appears (at this time) to differ markedly from the existing group of protease inhibitors.

An azapeptide, this protease inhibitor exhibits EC50 values well below the currently licensed group of protease inhibitors, with values of 2-5 nM., which is also well below the concentration of drug that induces cellular toxicity (CC50=2850 microM). Serial passage of virus in the presence of drug (to induce resistance mutations) demonstrated a delayed appearance of mutations (relative to saquinavir and ritonavir) and then the appearance of a different mutation N88S upon genotypic analysis. Cross resistance studies involving 5 other protease inhibitors indicated that BMS-232632 resistant virus remained sensitive to saquinavir while showing some resistance to nelfinavir, ritonavir, indinavir and amprenavir. In reciprocal cross resistance studies testing the sensitivity to BMS-232632 of strains resistant to nelfinavir, saquinavir and amprenavir, these viruses demonstrated sensitivity to the drug, while indinavir and ritonavir resistant virus displayed partial cross-resistance to BMS-232632.




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