Kaletra
Kaletra
Generic Name
Kaletra
Mechanism
- Dual component:
- Lopinavir – the active protease inhibitor that binds to the catalytic site of HIV‑1 protease, blocking cleavage of the Gag‑Pol polyprotein and preventing maturation of infectious virions.
- Ritonavir – mainly acts as a pharmacokinetic enhancer by competitively inhibiting CYP3A4, thereby increasing lopinavir plasma concentrations. It also possesses modest antiretroviral activity.
- The combination yields a synergistic antiviral effect and improves overall virologic suppression.
Pharmacokinetics
| Parameter | Lopinavir | Ritonavir |
| Absorption | Oral; bioavailability ↑ 2–3× with ritonavir | Oral; high bioavailability |
| Peak plasma (tmax) | 2–4 h | 2–4 h |
| Half‑life | 5–7 h (with ritonavir) | 4–5 h |
| Metabolism | CYP3A4 (inhibited by ritonavir) | CYP3A4 inhibitor |
| Excretion | Hepatic; minimal renal | Hepatic |
| Food effect | Mixed‑dose: food increases lopinavir levels by ~50 %; for PK‑dose, food delays absorption | Same as lopinavir |
Key point: Ritonavir’s CYP3A4 inhibition extends lopinavir’s half‑life, requiring dose adjustment and contributing to drug‑drug interaction potential.
Indications
- HIV‑1 infection:
- First‑line or second‑line antiretroviral therapy in combination with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs).
- Salvage therapy for patients failing other regimens, when guided by resistance testing.
- Prevention of mother‑to‑child transmission (in selective settings where guidelines allow).
Contraindications
- Contraindications:
- Known hypersensitivity to lopinavir, ritonavir, or any excipient.
- Concomitant use of strong CYP3A4 inducers (e.g., rifampin, carbamazepine, phenytoin).
- Warnings:
- Significant drug‑drug interactions due to CYP3A4 inhibition.
- Hepatic impairment: monitor liver function; severe hepatic disease (ALT > 5× ULN) contraindicated.
- Severe renal dysfunction: dose adjustment not required but monitor renal function.
- Lipid abnormalities: increases triglycerides and cholesterol; consider adjunct lipid‑lowering therapy.
- Pregnancy: Category C; use only if benefits outweigh risks.
Dosing
| Regimen | Lopinavir (mg) | Ritonavir (mg) | Frequency | Route |
| Adult | 400 mg | 100 mg | Twice daily (8 h apart) | Oral (spray). |
| Pediatric (≥6 yr) | 200 mg | 50 mg | Twice daily | Oral. |
| PK‑Dose | 1000 mg | 200 mg | Twice daily | Oral. |
• Administration: Take with a meal or light snack to optimize absorption; avoid high‑fat meals if using PK‑dose.
• Reconstitution: If using compressed tablets, crush and mix with sterile water; give immediately.
Adverse Effects
| Common | Serious |
| Dyspepsia, nausea, diarrhea, steatorrhea | Hepatotoxicity (↑ ALT/AST > 5× ULN) |
| Hyperlipidemia (↑ triglycerides, LDL) | Renal tubular acidosis |
| Rash, pruritus | Severe hypersensitivity (anaphylaxis) |
| QT prolongation (rare) | Severe hepatocellular injury |
| Weight gain (often mild) | Pancreatitis (rare) |
• Management: Lipid‑lowering agents for hyperlipidemia; NRTI–adjusted diet for GI upset; monitor liver enzymes weekly during initiation; consider dose reduction or discontinuation if ALT/AST exceed 5× ULN.
Monitoring
- Baseline: CBC, CMP (ALT, AST, bilirubin), fasting lipid profile, renal function, CD4 count, HIV‑RNA.
- During therapy:
- ALT/AST every 2 weeks for first 2 months, then monthly.
- Lipid profile every 3 months.
- Viral load every 4–12 weeks until suppression; thereafter every 3–6 months.
- Adherence counseling; drug interaction review at each visit.
- Special: Check for drug interactions with CYP3A4 substrates; adjust dosages accordingly.
Clinical Pearls
- Pharmacokinetic boosting: Ritonavir’s primary role is not antiretroviral potency but CYP3A4 inhibition; this property can be leveraged to boost other protease inhibitors (e.g., darunavir) at lower ritonavir doses.
- Food‑dependent absorption: For the fixed‑dose 200/50 mg tablets, take with food to avoid erratic absorption; the PK‑dose (1000/200 mg) is more forgiving but still benefits from a light snack.
- Drug interactions: Avoid prescribing Kaletra with strong CYP3A4 inducers (e.g., rifampin, carbamazepine); if unavoidable, consider therapeutic drug monitoring of lopinavir concentration or use alternative regimens.
- Adverse effect mitigation: Co‑prescribe a statin only after confirming liver enzymes are stable; prefer rosuvastatin due to lower CYP3A4 metabolism.
- Pregnancy: Use only when no safer alternatives exist; provide thorough counseling on potential teratogenic risks and advise concurrent use of a reliable contraceptive.
Quick reference: To memorize the dosage, the mnemonic “1lopinavir 1, 0ritonavir 0” (1000 mg/200 mg) reflects the PK‑dose, while the standard dose is 400/100 mg.