Lamivudine: Difference between revisions
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Lamivudine (3TC) is a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) used in combination with other antiretrovirals for [[HIV - AIDS (main)|HIV-1]] treatment and as a standalone agent for chronic hepatitis B (HBV). It is a cytidine analog functionally interchangeable with [[Emtricitabine|emtricitabine (FTC)]] — the two should '''never''' be combined. Lamivudine is found in the widely prescribed fixed-dose combinations Triumeq, Dovato, Epzicom, and Combivir.<ref name="EpivirPI">Epivir (lamivudine) [prescribing information]. Research Triangle Park, NC: ViiV Healthcare; 2017.</ref> | Lamivudine (3TC) is a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) used in combination with other antiretrovirals for [[HIV - AIDS (main)|HIV-1]] treatment and as a standalone agent for chronic hepatitis B (HBV). It is a cytidine analog functionally interchangeable with [[Emtricitabine|emtricitabine (FTC)]] — the two should '''never''' be combined. Lamivudine is found in the widely prescribed fixed-dose combinations Triumeq, Dovato, Epzicom, and Combivir.<ref name="EpivirPI">Epivir (lamivudine) [prescribing information]. Research Triangle Park, NC: ViiV Healthcare; 2017.</ref> | ||
Critical dosing distinction: Lamivudine is marketed at two different doses — Epivir (150 mg/300 mg for HIV) and Epivir-HBV (100 mg for hepatitis B). Using the lower HBV dose in an HIV/HBV co-infected patient will provide subtherapeutic HIV coverage and rapidly select for HIV resistance.<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | |||
==Administration== | ==Administration== | ||
| Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
==Adult Dosing== | ==Adult Dosing== | ||
* | *HIV treatment: 300 mg PO once daily, or 150 mg PO twice daily<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
*'''Hepatitis B (Epivir-HBV):''' 100 mg PO once daily ('''do not use this dose for HIV''')<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | *'''Hepatitis B (Epivir-HBV):''' 100 mg PO once daily ('''do not use this dose for HIV''')<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
* | *HIV/HBV co-infection: Use the HIV dose (300 mg daily) as part of combination ART<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
*May take with or without food | *May take with or without food | ||
*Scored tablets preferred over oral solution (solution has lower bioavailability; sorbitol-containing coadministered medications further reduce lamivudine exposure)<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | *Scored tablets preferred over oral solution (solution has lower bioavailability; sorbitol-containing coadministered medications further reduce lamivudine exposure)<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
| Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
==Pediatric Dosing== | ==Pediatric Dosing== | ||
*Approved for HIV treatment in patients ≥3 months<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | *Approved for HIV treatment in patients ≥3 months<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
* | *Weight-based: 5 mg/kg PO twice daily or 10 mg/kg PO once daily (max 300 mg/day) | ||
*Tablets preferred for children ≥14 kg (oral solution associated with lower virologic suppression rates in the ARROW trial)<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | *Tablets preferred for children ≥14 kg (oral solution associated with lower virologic suppression rates in the ARROW trial)<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
*Neonatal dosing available for perinatal prophylaxis regimens | *Neonatal dosing available for perinatal prophylaxis regimens | ||
| Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
==Contraindications== | ==Contraindications== | ||
*Allergy to class/drug | *Allergy to class/drug | ||
*Do | *Do not coadminister with [[Emtricitabine|emtricitabine]]-containing products (therapeutic duplication — both are cytidine analogs with overlapping resistance profiles)<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
==Adverse Reactions== | ==Adverse Reactions== | ||
| Line 72: | Line 72: | ||
==Comments== | ==Comments== | ||
* | *Epivir vs. Epivir-HBV — the critical dosing trap: If an HIV/HBV co-infected patient is accidentally prescribed Epivir-HBV (100 mg) instead of Epivir (150/300 mg), they are receiving subtherapeutic HIV coverage which will rapidly select for resistant HIV. Always verify the formulation and dose in co-infected patients<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
* | *Hepatitis B flare on discontinuation: Identical to the emtricitabine pearl — lamivudine has anti-HBV activity. Stopping any lamivudine-containing regimen (Triumeq, Dovato, Epzicom, Combivir, etc.) in an HIV/HBV co-infected patient can trigger a severe HBV flare presenting as acute liver failure. Check HBV serologies and LFTs in any HIV patient with jaundice or transaminase elevation after recent ARV discontinuation<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
*'''Emtricitabine duplication:''' Lamivudine and emtricitabine are functionally interchangeable — '''never''' combine them. Check the full medication list when reconciling ARVs (e.g., a patient on Dovato [dolutegravir/lamivudine] should not also receive Descovy [emtricitabine/TAF]) | *'''Emtricitabine duplication:''' Lamivudine and emtricitabine are functionally interchangeable — '''never''' combine them. Check the full medication list when reconciling ARVs (e.g., a patient on Dovato [dolutegravir/lamivudine] should not also receive Descovy [emtricitabine/TAF]) | ||
* | *Sorbitol interaction: Sorbitol-containing liquid medications significantly reduce lamivudine oral solution exposure. Avoid coadministration when possible; this is relevant in pediatric patients receiving multiple liquid formulations<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
* | *TMP-SMX interaction: Trimethoprim increases lamivudine levels by ~40% via competition for renal organic cationic secretion. No dose adjustment at standard TMP-SMX doses, but avoid high-dose TMP-SMX (PCP treatment doses) with lamivudine when possible<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
* | *Low drug interaction profile: Not CYP450-metabolized; does not affect levels of other drugs. Very safe from an interaction standpoint when prescribing in the ED | ||
* | *Low resistance barrier: The M184V/I mutation emerges rapidly with lamivudine monotherapy or subtherapeutic dosing. This is why proper combination therapy and correct dosing (HIV vs. HBV formulation) are essential | ||
*Overdose: No specific antidote; supportive care. No significant symptoms reported in acute overdoses. No additional dosing needed after dialysis<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | *Overdose: No specific antidote; supportive care. No significant symptoms reported in acute overdoses. No additional dosing needed after dialysis<ref name="EpivirPI"/> | ||
Latest revision as of 09:12, 22 March 2026
Lamivudine (3TC) is a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) used in combination with other antiretrovirals for HIV-1 treatment and as a standalone agent for chronic hepatitis B (HBV). It is a cytidine analog functionally interchangeable with emtricitabine (FTC) — the two should never be combined. Lamivudine is found in the widely prescribed fixed-dose combinations Triumeq, Dovato, Epzicom, and Combivir.[1]
Critical dosing distinction: Lamivudine is marketed at two different doses — Epivir (150 mg/300 mg for HIV) and Epivir-HBV (100 mg for hepatitis B). Using the lower HBV dose in an HIV/HBV co-infected patient will provide subtherapeutic HIV coverage and rapidly select for HIV resistance.[1]
Administration
- Type: Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI); cytidine analog
- Dosage Forms: 150 mg scored tablets, 300 mg tablets; 10 mg/mL oral solution (Epivir for HIV); 100 mg tablets, 5 mg/mL oral solution (Epivir-HBV)
- Routes of Administration: Oral
- Common Trade Names: Epivir (HIV dose), Epivir-HBV (hepatitis B dose); also in fixed-dose combinations: Triumeq (Dolutegravir/abacavir/lamivudine), Dovato (dolutegravir/lamivudine), Epzicom (abacavir/lamivudine), Combivir (zidovudine/lamivudine), Trizivir (abacavir/zidovudine/lamivudine)
Adult Dosing
- HIV treatment: 300 mg PO once daily, or 150 mg PO twice daily[1]
- Hepatitis B (Epivir-HBV): 100 mg PO once daily (do not use this dose for HIV)[1]
- HIV/HBV co-infection: Use the HIV dose (300 mg daily) as part of combination ART[1]
- May take with or without food
- Scored tablets preferred over oral solution (solution has lower bioavailability; sorbitol-containing coadministered medications further reduce lamivudine exposure)[1]
Pediatric Dosing
- Approved for HIV treatment in patients ≥3 months[1]
- Weight-based: 5 mg/kg PO twice daily or 10 mg/kg PO once daily (max 300 mg/day)
- Tablets preferred for children ≥14 kg (oral solution associated with lower virologic suppression rates in the ARROW trial)[1]
- Neonatal dosing available for perinatal prophylaxis regimens
Special Populations
Pregnancy Rating
- Extensively studied in pregnancy; APR data show no increased birth defect risk compared to background[1]
- Crosses the placenta; widely used as part of preferred NRTI backbone in pregnancy
- Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry: 1-800-258-4263
Lactation risk
- Excreted in human milk; women with HIV should discuss risks and benefits of breastfeeding with their provider[1]
Renal Dosing
- Adult (primarily renally eliminated; dose reduction required):[1]
- CrCl 30–49 mL/min: 150 mg PO once daily
- CrCl 15–29 mL/min: 150 mg first dose, then 100 mg PO once daily
- CrCl 5–14 mL/min: 150 mg first dose, then 50 mg PO once daily
- CrCl <5 mL/min: 50 mg first dose, then 25 mg PO once daily
- No additional dosing required after routine hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis
- Pediatric: Insufficient data; consider proportional reduction
Hepatic Dosing
- Adult: No dose adjustment needed (pharmacokinetics not significantly altered by hepatic impairment)[1]
- Pediatric: No specific data
Contraindications
- Allergy to class/drug
- Do not coadminister with emtricitabine-containing products (therapeutic duplication — both are cytidine analogs with overlapping resistance profiles)[1]
Adverse Reactions
Serious
- Hepatitis B flare (Boxed Warning): Severe, acute exacerbations of HBV (including hepatic decompensation and failure) reported in HIV/HBV co-infected patients who discontinue lamivudine-containing regimens. Monitor hepatic function closely for at least several months after stopping[1]
- Lactic acidosis with hepatic steatosis (NRTI class effect; including fatal cases)[1]
- Pancreatitis (rare; more common in pediatric patients)[1]
- Immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS)
Common
- Headache, nausea, malaise, fatigue, nasal symptoms, diarrhea, cough[1]
- Insomnia
- Musculoskeletal pain
- Elevated transaminases, CPK
Pharmacology
- Half-life: ~5–7 hours (plasma); intracellular triphosphate half-life ~10–15 hours[1]
- Bioavailability: ~86%[1]
- Protein Binding: <36%[1]
- Metabolism: Minimal hepatic metabolism; not a CYP450 substrate and does not inhibit or induce CYP enzymes[1]
- Excretion: ~70% unchanged in urine via glomerular filtration and active organic cationic tubular secretion[1]
Mechanism of Action
Lamivudine is a cytidine analog that is intracellularly phosphorylated to its active form, lamivudine triphosphate. This competes with the natural substrate deoxycytidine triphosphate for incorporation by HIV-1 reverse transcriptase. Once incorporated into viral DNA, it acts as a chain terminator due to the absence of a 3'-hydroxyl group. Lamivudine triphosphate also inhibits HBV polymerase, which accounts for its dual HIV/HBV activity.[1]
Comments
- Epivir vs. Epivir-HBV — the critical dosing trap: If an HIV/HBV co-infected patient is accidentally prescribed Epivir-HBV (100 mg) instead of Epivir (150/300 mg), they are receiving subtherapeutic HIV coverage which will rapidly select for resistant HIV. Always verify the formulation and dose in co-infected patients[1]
- Hepatitis B flare on discontinuation: Identical to the emtricitabine pearl — lamivudine has anti-HBV activity. Stopping any lamivudine-containing regimen (Triumeq, Dovato, Epzicom, Combivir, etc.) in an HIV/HBV co-infected patient can trigger a severe HBV flare presenting as acute liver failure. Check HBV serologies and LFTs in any HIV patient with jaundice or transaminase elevation after recent ARV discontinuation[1]
- Emtricitabine duplication: Lamivudine and emtricitabine are functionally interchangeable — never combine them. Check the full medication list when reconciling ARVs (e.g., a patient on Dovato [dolutegravir/lamivudine] should not also receive Descovy [emtricitabine/TAF])
- Sorbitol interaction: Sorbitol-containing liquid medications significantly reduce lamivudine oral solution exposure. Avoid coadministration when possible; this is relevant in pediatric patients receiving multiple liquid formulations[1]
- TMP-SMX interaction: Trimethoprim increases lamivudine levels by ~40% via competition for renal organic cationic secretion. No dose adjustment at standard TMP-SMX doses, but avoid high-dose TMP-SMX (PCP treatment doses) with lamivudine when possible[1]
- Low drug interaction profile: Not CYP450-metabolized; does not affect levels of other drugs. Very safe from an interaction standpoint when prescribing in the ED
- Low resistance barrier: The M184V/I mutation emerges rapidly with lamivudine monotherapy or subtherapeutic dosing. This is why proper combination therapy and correct dosing (HIV vs. HBV formulation) are essential
- Overdose: No specific antidote; supportive care. No significant symptoms reported in acute overdoses. No additional dosing needed after dialysis[1]
See Also
- HIV - AIDS (main)
- HIV post-exposure prophylaxis
- Immune reconstitution syndrome
- Emtricitabine/tenofovir
- Emtricitabine
- Dolutegravir
