August 31, 1998
A smaller study conducted by Richard Pollard and others from the University of Texas evaluated the effect of ddI + d4T + hydroxyurea in 12 patients with a mean CD4 count of 216, most (11) of whom were on antiretroviral monotherapy. CD4 counts increased in half of the patients by an average of 84 cells and decreased in 3 patients by an average of 34 cells after 4 weeks of therapy. Viral loads decreased by 1.6-2.5 logs in these 9 patients, and was suppressed in four patients who continued the therapy for 12 weeks. The most common major side effect was neutropenia which developed in 4 patients entering the study with absolute neutrophil counts below 1700 cells/ul, but was reversible upon withdrawal of hydroxyurea.
In another poster presentation Franco Lori and colleagues from the Research Institute of Genetic and Human Therapy in Maryland presented data on over 40 patients who have received ddI and hydroxyurea combination therapy for over one year with no evidence of breakthrough viral replication. The combination of ddI and hydroxyurea was unable to prevent the emergence of mutations that confer ddI resistance, yet the mutants wer still sensitive to standard doses of ddI in the presence of hydroxyurea. Indeed in a comparative study of genotypic data from patients who received either ddI monotherapy or ddI + hydroxyurea, those in the monotherapy arm developed codon mutations in the 69-74 region less frequently (37.5%) than those in the combination arm (58.3%). They proposed that in vivo hydroxyurea lowers the levels of the cellular competitor of ddI, dATP which allows for the incorporation of ddI, even if the reverse transcriptase is resistant to the nucleoside analogue.
Hydroxyurea continues to be studied in various clinical trials in the United States and Europe, including an ACTG trial and an AmFAR sponsored trial which is fully enrolled and is expected to have results shortly.