A controlled trial comparing foscarnet with vidarabine for acyclovir-resistant mucocutaneous herpes simplex in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The AIDS Clinical Trials Group.

BACKGROUND AND METHODS Most strains of herpes simplex virus that are resistant to acyclovir are susceptible in vitro to both foscarnet and vidarabine. We conducted a randomized trial to compare foscarnet with vidarabine in 14 patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and mucocutaneous herpetic lesions that had been unresponsive to intravenous therapy with acyclovir for a minimum of 10 days. The patients were randomly assigned to receive either foscarnet (40 mg per kilogram of body weight intravenously every 8 hours) or vidarabine (15 mg per kilogram per day intravenously) for 10 to 42 days. In the isolates of herpes simplex virus we documented in vitro resistance to acyclovir and susceptibility to foscarnet and vidarabine. RESULTS The lesions in all eight patients assigned to foscarnet healed completely after 10 to 24 days of therapy. In contrast, vidarabine was discontinued because of failure in all six patients assigned to receive it. The time to complete healing (P = 0.01), time to 50 percent reductions in the size of the lesions (P = 0.01) and the pain score (P = 0.004), and time to the end of viral shedding (P = 0.006) were all significantly shorter in the patients assigned to foscarnet. Three patients had new neurologic abnormalities while receiving vidarabine. No patient discontinued foscarnet because of toxicity. Although initial recurrences of herpes simplex infection after the index lesion had healed tended to be susceptible to acyclovir, acyclovir-resistant infection eventually recurred in every healed patient, a median of 42.5 days (range, 14 to 191) after foscarnet was discontinued. CONCLUSIONS For the treatment of acyclovir-resistant herpes simplex infection in patients with AIDS, foscarnet has superior efficacy and less frequent serious toxicity than vidarabine. Once the treatment is stopped, however; there is a high frequency of relapse.

[1]  S. Follansbee,et al.  Foscarnet therapy for acyclovir-resistant mucocutaneous herpes simplex virus infection in 26 AIDS patients: preliminary data. , 1990, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[2]  A. Chow,et al.  Neurotoxic effects during vidarabine therapy for herpes zoster. , 1985, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[3]  M. Jacobson,et al.  Foscarnet treatment of cytomegalovirus retinitis in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome , 1989, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[4]  S. Soong,et al.  Vidarabine therapy of neonatal herpes simplex virus infection. , 1980, Pediatrics.

[5]  C. Crumpacker,et al.  Acyclovir-resistant herpes simplex virus infections in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  D. Shanson,et al.  ACYCLOVIR-RESISTANT HERPES IN AIDS TREATED WITH FOSCARNET , 1988, The Lancet.

[7]  K. Erlich,et al.  Mucocutaneous dissemination of acyclovir-resistant herpes simplex virus in a patient with AIDS. , 1989, Reviews of infectious diseases.

[8]  S. Feldman,et al.  Neurotoxicity due to adenine arabinoside therapy during varicella-zoster virus infections in immunocompromised children. , 1986, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[9]  M. Boogaerts,et al.  Chronic herpetic infection in an immunocompromised patient: report of a case. , 1987, Journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery : official journal of the American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons.

[10]  J. Subak-Sharpe,et al.  Induction of both thymidine and deoxycytidine kinase activity by herpes viruses. , 1974, The Journal of general virology.

[11]  C. Crumpacker,et al.  Successful treatment with foscarnet of an acyclovir-resistant mucocutaneous infection with herpes simplex virus in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  H. Kessler,et al.  Severe, progressive herpetic whitlow caused by an acyclovir-resistant virus in a patient with AIDS. , 1988, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[13]  C. Cobbs,et al.  Pharmacology, Tolerance, and Antiviral Activity of Vidarabine Monophosphate in Humans , 1980, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[14]  A. Lerner,et al.  Microbiologic assays and neurological toxicity during use of adenine arabinoside in humans. , 1976, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[15]  I. Gust,et al.  Altered sensitivity to antiviral drugs of herpes simplex virus isolates from a patient with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. , 1990, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[16]  S. Soong,et al.  Adenine arabinoside therapy of biopsy-proved herpes simplex encephalitis. , 1977, Journal of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama.

[17]  T. Merigan,et al.  Antiviral treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus infection: pharmacokinetics and side effects of interferon and adenine arabinoside alone and in combination , 1982, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[18]  J. Craig,et al.  ACYCLOVIR-RESISTANT HERPES SIMPLEX VIRUS INFECTION DUE TO ALTERED DNA POLYMERASE , 1987, The Lancet.

[19]  K. Tyler,et al.  Progressive esophagitis from acyclovir-resistant herpes simplex. Clinical roles for DNA polymerase mutants and viral heterogeneity? , 1989, Annals of internal medicine.

[20]  B. Larder,et al.  Characterization of a DNA polymerase mutant of herpes simplex virus from a severely immunocompromised patient receiving acyclovir. , 1989, The Journal of general virology.

[21]  F. Hayden,et al.  Vidarabine therapy for mucocutaneous herpes simplex virus infections in the immunocompromised host. , 1984, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[22]  M. Jacobson,et al.  Foscarnet therapy for severe acyclovir-resistant herpes simplex virus type-2 infections in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). An uncontrolled trial. , 1989, Annals of internal medicine.

[23]  S. Straus,et al.  Clinical isolate of herpes simplex virus type 2 that induces a thymidine kinase with altered substrate specificity , 1987, Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

[24]  R. Whitley,et al.  Adenine arabinoside for therapy of herpes zoster in immunosuppressed patients: preliminary results of a collaborative study. , 1976, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[25]  H. Otsuka,et al.  Herpes simplex virus type 2 meningoencephalitis resistant to acyclovir in a patient with AIDS. , 1990, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[26]  A. Julià,et al.  Toxicity of adenine arabinoside in humans. , 1976, The Journal of infectious diseases.