Chemical structure of lamivudine.
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Lamivudine

Lamivudine (2',3'-dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine, 3TC) has the trade name EpivirĀ®. It is a potent reverse transcriptase inhibitor of the class nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NARTI). more...

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Lamivudine has been used for treatment of chronic hepatitis B at a lower dose than for treatment of HIV. It improves the seroconversion of e-antigen positive hepatitis B and also improves histology staging of the liver. Long term use of lamivudine unfortunately leads to emergence of a resistant hepatitis B virus (YMDD) mutant. Despite this, lamivudine is still used widely as it is well tolerated.

History

Lamivudine was invented by Bernard Belleau and Nghe Nguyen-Ba at the Montreal-based IAF BioChem International, Inc. laboratories in 1989. The drug was later licensed to the British pharmaceutical company Glaxo for a 14 percent royalty.

Lamivudine was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Nov 17, 1995 for use with Zidovudine (AZT) and again in 2002 as a once-a-day dosed medication. The fifth antiretroviral drug on the market, it was the last NRTI for three years while the approval process switched to protease inhibitors. Its patent will expire in the United States on 2016-05-18.

Mechanism of action

Lamivudine is an analogue of cytidine. It can inhibit both types (1 and 2) of HIV reverse transcriptase and also the reverse transcriptase of hepatitis B. It needs to be phosphorylated to its triphosphate form before it is active. 3TC-triphosphate also inhibits cellular DNA polymerase.

Lamivudine is administered orally, and it is rapidly absorbed with a bio-availability of over 80%. Some research suggests that lamivudine can cross the blood-brain barrier. Lamivudine is often given in combination with zidovudine, with which it is highly synergistic. Lamivudine treatment has been shown to restore zidovudine sensitivity of previously resistant HIV. Several mutagenicity tests show that lamivudine should not show mutagenic activity in therapeutical doses.


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Failure of combination abacavir + tenofovir + lamivudine - 3TC - Brief Article
From AIDS Treatment News, 7/25/03

In late July 2003 GlaxoSmithKline warned physicians that a three-drug combination of lamivudine (Epivir[R]), abacavir (Ziagen[R]) and tenofovir (Viread[TM]) had failed to control HIV effectively in about half the treatment-naive patients in a clinical trial. The cause of the reduced response to this particular regimen is not known, but it may involve mutations causing cross-resistance to the drugs; Glaxo is also checking for chemical interactions inside the cell. The problem is not due to any one of the drugs; rather, for some reason this particular combination turned out not to work well.

The company advised:

"Abacavir and lamivudine in combination with tenofovir should not be used as a triple antiretroviral therapy when considering a new treatment regimen for naive or pre-treated patients;

"Any patient currently controlled on therapy with this combination should be closely monitored and considered for modification of therapy; and

"Any usage of this triple combination with other antiretroviral agents should be closely monitored for signs of treatment failure."

COPYRIGHT 2003 John S. James
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group

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