- 3TC (lamivudine, Epivir)
- Abacavir (Ziagen)
- Atazanavir (Reyataz)
- Atripla
- AZT (zidovudine, Retrovir)
- Combivir
- d4T (stavudine, Zerit)
- Darunavir (Prezista)
- ddI (didanosine, Videx / VidexEC)
- Efavirenz (Sustiva)
- Fosamprenavir (Telzir)
- FTC (emtricitabine, Emtriva)
- Indinavir (Crixivan)
- Kaletra
- Kivexa
- Lopinavir
- Nelfinavir (Viracept)
- Nevirapine (Viramune)
- Ritonavir (Norvir)
- Saquinavir (Invirase)
- T-20 (enfuvirtide, Fuzeon)
- Tenofovir disoproxil (Viread)
- Tipranavir (Aptivus)
- Trizivir
- Truvada
Tipranavir (Aptivus)
Tipranavir (Aptivus) is a new protease inhibitor formerly known by the codename PNU-140690. It is one of a new class of HIV protease inhibitors called dihydropyrones or non-peptidic protease inhibitors. It is designed to be active against HIV strains that have become resistant to other protease inhibitors.
Protease inhibitors act by blocking HIV’s protease or proteinase, the enzyme that HIV uses to break up large viral proteins so new HIV particles can be made. For more information about how protease inhibitors work, see Protease inhibitors.
Originally developed by Pharmacia & Upjohn, tipranavir was acquired by Boehringer Ingelheim, who market it as Aptivus.
Accelerated approval of tipranavir for treatment-experienced patients was granted by the United States Food and Drug Administration in June 2005, and by the European Union in October 2005.
latest aidsmap news
- Fluconazole shown to be more effective against cryptococcal meningitis at higher dose
- Promising early results for large-scale study of community-level HIV prevention initiative
- Widespread resistance to antiretrovirals among children in the Central African Republic
- Children starting HIV treatment in sub-Saharan Africa have a low risk of death
- Different paediatric responses to antiretroviral therapy in Uganda and the United Kingdom/Ireland may reflect differences in nutrition and access to cotrimoxazole
- Rare abacavir liver side-effects reported
- Abacavir treatment doesn't cause changes in biomarkers linked to heart attack, suggests small study
- Traditional healers could play key role in ART rollout
- HIV testing for mothers and children must expand, UN report shows
- HIV diagnoses in European MSM have almost doubled since 2000, UK tops the list
