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About
The purpose of the study is to investigate the benefits of switching away from efavirenz (part of the combination pill, Atripla®) in patients with central nervous system side effects (such as insomnia {difficulty with sleeping}, bad dreams etc). The investigators will investigate the effect of switching to Truvada (a combination pill of tenofovir and emtricitabine, the other two components of Atripla) plus raltegravir.
Raltegravir is a licensed drug for HIV treatment which showed side effects were fewer in number when compared to efavirenz in 2 other clinical studies, where patients were starting HIV treatment for the first time.
This study will also investigate the safety (in terms of other side effects and the routine blood tests which the investigators ordinarily use to monitor your treatment) and monitor effectiveness, your viral load and CD4 counts, when you switch treatment from Atripla® to Truvada/raltegravir.
Full description
The majority of individuals who commence treatment for HIV in the UK start with a regimen that includes EFV in combination with other antiretrovirals. These regimens are convenient (once daily dosing) and highly efficacious. However EFV has several potential drawbacks including continued CNS toxicity, the potential for teratogenesis and a low barrier to the development of virological resistance.
Clinically controlled trials frequently reported undesirable nervous system side effects in patients receiving 600 mg EFV with other antiretroviral agents, including dizziness, insomnia, somnolence, impaired concentration and abnormal dreaming. CNS symptoms of moderate to severe intensity were experienced by 19.4% of patients compared to 9.0% of patients receiving control regimens. These symptoms were severe in 2.0% of patients receiving EFV 600 mg daily and in 1.3% of patients receiving control regimens. In clinical studies 2.1% of patients treated with 600 mg of EFV discontinued therapy because of nervous system symptoms
The majority of individuals who commence treatment for HIV in the UK start with a regimen that includes EFV in combination with other antiretrovirals. These regimens are convenient (once daily dosing) and highly efficacious. However EFV has several potential drawbacks including continued CNS toxicity, the potential for teratogenesis and a low barrier to the development of virological resistance.
Clinically controlled trials frequently reported undesirable nervous system side effects in patients receiving 600 mg EFV with other antiretroviral agents, including dizziness, insomnia, somnolence, impaired concentration and abnormal dreaming. CNS symptoms of moderate to severe intensity were experienced by 19.4% of patients compared to 9.0% of patients receiving control regimens. These symptoms were severe in 2.0% of patients receiving EFV 600 mg daily and in 1.3% of patients receiving control regimens. In clinical studies 2.1% of patients treated with 600 mg of EFV discontinued therapy because of nervous system symptoms.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
is infected with HIV-2
is using any concomitant therapy disallowed as per SPC for the study drugs (section 5.2)
has a currently active AIDS defining illness (Category C conditions according to the CDC Classification System for HIV Infection 1993) with the following exceptions (must be discussed with the sponsor prior to enrolment):
has acute viral hepatitis including, but not limited to, A, B, or C
has chronic hepatitis B and/or C with AST and/or ALT >5 x ULN Note: Subjects co-infected with chronic HBV or HCV can enter the trial if clinically stable and not expected to require treatment during the trial period.
has received any investigational drug within 30 days prior to the trial drug administration
Prior exposure to raltegravir or investigational integrase inhibitors
Any tenofovir or emtricitabine associated resistance mutations
No baseline resistance test available
Clinically significant allergy or hypersensitivity to any trial medication excipients
If female, she is pregnant or breastfeeding
screening blood results with any grade 3 / 4 toxicity according to Division of AIDS (DAIDS) grading scale, except: asymptomatic grade 3 glucose, amylase or lipid elevation or asymptomatic grade 4 triglyceride elevation (re-test allowed).
Clinical or laboratory evidence of significantly decreased hepatic function or decompensation: INR > 1.5 or albumin < 30g/L or bilirubin > 2.5 x ULN
Resolution of their CNS toxicity between Screening and Baseline visits
Any condition (including drug/alcohol abuse) or laboratory results which, in the investigator's opinion, interfere with assessments or completion of the trial.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
40 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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