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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, November 2004, p . 4332-4336, Vol . 48, No . 11 Maternal-Fetal Transfer and Amniotic Fluid Accumulation of Nucleoside Analogue Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Pregnant WomenHélène Chappuy,1,2 Jean-Marc Tréluyer,1* Vincent Jullien,1 Jérôme Dimet,1 Elisabeth Rey,1 Maria Fouché,3 Ghislaine Firtion,3 Gérard Pons,1 and Laurent Mandelbrot4 Pharmacologie Clinique, Université René-Descartes, Hôpital Cochin Saint-Vincent-de-Paul,1 Département dUrgences Pédiatriques, Université René Descartes, Hôpital Necker Enfants Malades,2 Gynécologie-Obstétrique Hôpital Cochin, Paris,3 Gynécologie-Obstétrique Hôpital Louis Mourier, Colombes, France4 Received 13 February 2004/ Returned for modification 22 April 2004/ Accepted 8 July 2004
However, the data about the safety of antiretroviral drugs are limited, with the exceptions of zidovudine and, to a lesser extent, lamivudine . A study conducted in France reported that several infants with perinatal exposure to either zidovudine-lamivudine or zidovudine alone developed persistent mitochondrial dysfunction (2) . The causal relation between NRTI exposure and mitochondrial disease remains controversial (14) . Follow-up is still insufficient to address the effect that exposure to zidovudine or other antiretroviral agents in utero might have on long-term risk for neoplasia or organ system toxicities in children (5, 8) . The placental transfer and pharmacodynamics in the fetal compartment are important to consider when prescribing drugs during pregnancy . Zidovudine has been widely used and studied in pregnancy, and high cord-to-maternal plasma drug concentration ratios have been consistently reported (15, 26) . Similar results have been reported with lamivudine (12, 14) . There have been few clinical studies concerning didanosine or stavudine (25) and no report concerning abacavir . The present study was performed to compare the placental transfers and amniotic fluid concentrations of the commercially available nucleoside analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitors used in a clinical setting .
Cord blood samples were collected at delivery by venipuncture into heparinized tubes after the cord was carefully wiped to avoid potential contamination with amniotic fluid or maternal blood . Maternal blood was drawn at the same time . Amniotic fluid samples were obtained at the time of membrane rupture in the case of planned cesarean deliveries and whenever possible in other deliveries, with precautions taken to avoid contamination with maternal blood . Amniotic fluid samples that contained visible contamination with blood were discarded . Plasma was isolated by centrifugation . All of the drugs were measured in a 100-µl plasma sample by high-performance liquid chromatography . An internal standard was used with each analytical procedure . Zidovudine and its glucuronide metabolite zidovudine G were measured simultaneously, extracted by using a solid-phase extraction procedure on Bond Elut C18 (conditioning step, methanol and phosphate-buffered saline buffer; washing step, phosphate-buffered saline buffer; elution step, methanol), and separated isocratically on a Satisfaction C8 Plus column (250 by 3 mm) with a mobile phase consisting of buffer (25 mM potassium phosphate, pH 2.9) and methanol (80:20, vol/vol) at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min . UV absorbance at 267 nm was used for detection . The lower limit of quantification (LOQ) was 0.05 mg/liter . The mean interassay precisions at the lowest concentration of the quality controls were 10 and 13.9%, and inaccuracies at the LOQ (percent deviation from the expected value) were 4.2 and 7.5%, for zidovudine and its metabolite, respectively . Overall recovery from plasma was 89% for zidovudine and 82% for zidovudine G . Lamivudine, stavudine, and didanosine were measured simultaneously, extracted by solid-phase extraction on Bond Elut C18, and separated on a Satisfaction C8 Plus column (250 by 3 mm) with a gradient (flow rate, 0.5 ml/min) of solvent A (water with 0.01% trifluoroacetic acid) and solvent B (acetonitrile) as follows: 98% solvent A and 2% solvent B for 10 min and 90% solvent A and 10% solvent B for 20 min . UV absorbance at 270 nm was used for detection of lamivudine and stavudine, and UV absorbance at 254 nm was used for didanosine . The LOQs were 0.05 mg/liter for lamivudine and stavudine and 0.025 mg/liter for didanosine . Mean interassay precisions at the low quality controls were 10% (lamivudine), 12.7% (stavudine), and 15% (didanosine), and inaccuracies at the LOQ were 4.5% (lamivudine), 0.67% (stavudine), and 0% (didanosine) . Overall recoveries were 65% (lamivudine), 81% (stavudine), and 76% (didanosine) . Abacavir was extracted with terbutylmethylether and separated isocratically on a Satisfaction C8 Plus column (250 by 3 mm) with a mobile phase consisting of buffer (10 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.2) and acetonitrile (82:18, vol/vol) at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min . UV absorbance at 280 nm was used . The LOQ was 0.025 mg/liter . Mean interassay precision at the low quality controls was 14%, and accuracy at the LOQ was 1% . Overall recovery was 60% . Each blood and amniotic fluid sample was accompanied by the exact sampling time and the hours of the last antiretroviral dose intakes before delivery . The maternal-fetal transfer was evaluated by the ratio of the concentration in fetal plasma to that in maternal plasma . Descriptive statistics (median and range) were reported for all five NRTIs measured in maternal, cord, and amniotic samples . Linear regression analysis was used to correlate cord and maternal plasma samples . Quantitative values were compared by using the t test .
The NRTIs received by the 100 women included intravenous zidovudine (n = 100), oral zidovudine (n = 60), lamivudine (n = 67), stavudine (n = 32), didanosine (n = 24), and abacavir (n = 4) . The majority of these women (83 of 100) received antiretroviral regimens with two NRTIs, with the most frequently prescribed combination (n = 20) being zidovudine with lamivudine and nelfinavir . Twelve patients were taking a regimen with only one NRTI; these regimens included zidovudine alone (n = 6), one NRTI and nevirapine (n = 5), and one NRTI and two protease inhibitors (n = 1) . Maternal antiretroviral therapy was initiated before the beginning of pregnancy in 27% of cases, during the first trimester in 14% of cases, during second trimester in 25% of cases, and during third trimester in 34% of cases . The median time on treatment with the current NRTI was 3 months (range, 0.23 to 81.7 months) for zidovudine, 4.78 months (range, 0.23 to 81.7 months) for lamivudine, 5.63 months (range, 0.53 to 45.8 months) for stavudine, 4.23 months (range, 0.53 to 37.3 months) for didanosine, and 21.2 months (range, 7.1 to 35 months) for abacavir . The median time elapsed between the last NRTI oral dose and delivery was 5.0 h (range, 0.4 to 22.0 h) for zidovudine, 5.0 h (range, 0.4 to 22 h) for lamivudine, 13.0 h (range, 1.2 to 20 h) for stavudine, 9.0 h (range, 2.1 to 33 h) for didanosine, and 3.5 h (range, 0.4 to 9.0 h) for abacavir . Median drug concentrations in maternal and cord plasma samples are displayed in Table 1 . Cord blood drug concentrations were below the assay limit of detection in 14 of 32 samples (44%) for stavudine and in 15 of 24 samples (62%) for didanosine but were detectable in all samples for zidovudine, zidovudine G, lamivudine, and abacavir .
Median drug concentrations and ratios in amniotic fluid are displayed in Table 2 . Median concentrations in amniotic fluid were higher than those in maternal and cord plasma samples for lamivudine (0.45 and 0.41 mg/liter, respectively), zidovudine (0.59 and 0.7 mg/liter, respectively), zidovudine G (1.60 and 1.62 mg/liter, respectively), and stavudine (0.0 and 0.04 mg/liter, respectively) . Concentrations of zidovudine and its metabolite in amniotic fluid were higher in mothers receiving oral zidovudine prior to delivery than in mothers received only intrapartum intravenous zidovudine; the median zidovudine and zidovudine G concentrations were, respectively, 1.68 mg/liter (range, 0.89 to 4.33 mg/liter) versus 1.31 mg/liter (range, 0.15 to 2.67 mg/liter) (P < 0.01) and 8.8 mg/liter (range, 3.8 to 26.0 mg/liter) versus 2.9 mg/liter (range, 0.1 to 4.4 mg/liter) (P < 0.01) . Median (range) amniotic fluid/cord plasma drug concentration ratios, in samples with cord plasma drug concentrations above the assay limit of detection, were as follows: zidovudine, 2.25 (0.08 to 8.38); zidovudine G, 2.83 (0.06 to 19.6); stavudine, 4.87 (0.98 to 11.9); lamivudine, 3.99 (1.62 to 17.1); and didanosine, 1.14 (1.02 to 3.16) . There was only one such ratio for abacavir, 0.89 . A significant relationship between amniotic fluid and cord plasma drug concentrations was seen for zidovudine G (r2 = 0.10; P < 0.01), lamivudine (r2 = 0.10; P < 0.01), and stavudine (r2 = 0.22; P < 0.01) . The ratio of the amniotic fluid drug concentration to the maternal plasma drug concentration was significantly related to the time elapsed since the last maternal dose for lamivudine but not for stavudine, didanosine, and abacavir .
For zidovudine, lamivudine, and stavudine, the ratio of the drug concentration in the fetal plasma to that in the maternal plasma was about 1, which suggests that these drugs freely crossed the placenta through a passive diffusion mechanism . The physicochemical characteristics of these drugs, i.e., low molecular weight and low protein binding, are compatible with high placental transfer . These findings are consistent with those obtained from animal studies (19), an ex vivo placental perfusion model (1), and human clinical trials (15, 21) . For lamivudine, a significant relationship between cord/maternal drug concentration ratios and postdosing intervals was seen, which suggests that accumulation of the compound occurs in the fetal compartment . For didanosine, the ratio of the concentration in the fetal plasma to that in the maternal plasma was the lowest . Low concentrations of didanosine in the maternal circulation at delivery, largely due to once-a-day dosing, are likely to contribute to the low fetal drug concentrations, which is in accord with experimental findings obtained from animal studies (17), the ex vivo placental perfusion model (6, 9), and one clinical trial (25) . The only antiretroviral drugs for which concentrations in amniotic fluid have previously been studied in humans are zidovudine (second trimester) (18) and lamivudine (12) . In our study, median concentrations in amniotic fluid were higher than those in maternal and cord plasma samples for lamivudine, stavudine, and zidovudine and its glucuronide metabolite . These high concentrations in amniotic fluid could probably be explained by the fetal urinary excretion of these drugs in the amniotic fluid and slow elimination from the amniotic cavity by the paraplacental route and diffusion across the placental surface . This is consistent with previous animal (23) and clinical (12) studies . Unlike others drugs, zidovudine, which is metabolized to a glucuronide form in the maternal compartment, is rapidly converted in the animal fetus to glucuronide zidovudine (16) . Thus, concentrations of intact zidovudine in the fetus are lower, and fetal urinary excretion concerns the glucuronide form of zidovudine . The comparison of cord-to-maternal drug concentration ratios has several limitations . The results are obtained at delivery and thus cannot be extrapolated to earlier gestational ages . Moreover, cord-to-maternal ratios offer data on only a single point in time . The measured maternal drug concentrations depend on the time between the last maternal dose and delivery, which is usually long . As shown from ex vivo placental perfusion studies, placental transfer is dependent on the drug concentration and is higher at peak concentrations (1, 3) . Although we did not find a relationship between the time from last dose to delivery and cord blood drug concentrations (except for lamivudine), few of the maternal levels were peak concentrations . Further studies are required to estimate placental transfer of NRTIs at peak concentrations . The high concentrations of NRTIs found in the fetal circulation may have beneficial or deleterious consequences . In utero exposure carries a risk of toxicity to the fetus . It should be kept in mind that most of the antiretroviral agents have been introduced relatively recently, and long-term follow up is not available . On the other hand, the efficacy of NRTIs in decreasing the rate of mother-to-child transmission may be at least in part attributable to their ability to provide postexposure prophylaxis in the fetal compartment (22) . This would be of importance during late pregnancy and delivery, when most of the exposure occurs (10) . However, obtaining low viral replication in the mother, as evidenced by plasma HIV RNA levels below the detection limit, appears to be effective, and may be sufficient, to achieve a low rate of transmission (below 1%) (7) . The high concentrations of antiretroviral drugs that we observed in the amniotic fluid may have important clinical implications . The presence of antiretroviral drugs in the digestive tract may be protective against concomitant exposure to infectious HIV by the oral route . Virus has been detected in oropharyngeal or gastric aspirates from approximately one-third of neonates born to HIV type 1-infected mothers receiving zidovudine (11) . Furthermore, antiretrovirals in the amniotic fluid at delivery may amount to an oral loading dose, which would continue to be absorbed in the hours following birth . On the other hand, further investigations will be needed to study whether the high amniotic fluid antiretroviral concentrations have an impact on the long-term safety of children .
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