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About
Ebola and HIV are found predominately in the same regions of the world and countries in sub-Saharan Africa are most affected by both diseases. For Ebola, no approved therapies exist. However, new investigational drugs are being evaluated to understand if they are effective against the Ebola virus. Remdesivir is an anti-Ebola investigational drug for the treatment of Ebola. Little is known about how the blood levels of remdesivir relate to how effective it is in patients with HIV taking antiretroviral therapy. This study will explore how commonly utilized ART (tenofovir/lamivudine and atazanavir/ritonavir) affect the drug levels of remdesivir.
Full description
The study is designed as an open-label, randomized, fixed sequence, single intravenous dosing study to assess the effects of antiretrovirals on remdesivir pharmacokinetics.
The selection of healthy volunteers, as opposed to patients with HIV, avoids the greatest possible extent confounding factors, such as enzyme or transporter activity alteration in inflammatory states, concomitant medications potentially impacting drug disposition and other factors which are commonly present in a population of patients and cannot be easily eliminated.
Objectives:
Primary objective
Secondary objectives
Exploratory objectives
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Evidence of a personally signed and dated informed consent document indicating that the participant has been informed of all pertinent aspects of the study.
Participants who are willing and able to comply with scheduled visits, treatment plan, laboratory tests, and other study procedures.
Healthy men and women aged 18 to 55 years of age, and in good health as determined by past medical history, physical examination, vital signs, electrocardiogram, and laboratory tests at screening.
At screening, and all other visits, vital signs (systolic and diastolic blood pressure and pulse rate) will be assessed in the sitting position and again (when required) in the standing position. Sitting vital signs should be within the following ranges:
I. axillary body temperature between 35.5-37.0 °C II. systolic blood pressure, 90-139 mmHg III. diastolic blood pressure, 50-89 mmHg IV. Pulse rate, 50-90 bpm. If pulse rate is between 40 and 50 bpm, the Investigator may decide to enroll the subject if he/she has history of athletic practice or other regular high cardio-vascular activity and ECG assessment is within normal range.
Subjects should be excluded if their standing vital signs (relative to sitting) show findings which, in the opinion of the Investigator, are associated with clinical manifestation of postural hypotension (i.e. absence of any other cause). The Investigator should carefully consider enrolling subjects with either a > 20 mmHg decrease in systolic or a >10 mm Hg decrease in diastolic blood pressure, accompanied by a > 20 bpm increase in heart-rate (from sitting to standing).
Subjects must weigh at least 40 kg to participate in the study and must have a body mass index (BMI) within the range 18-30 Kg/m2. BMI= Body weight (kg) / [Height (m)]2
HIV antibody negative at screening.
Women of childbearing potential must be willing to use a highly effective contraception method (eg. IUD or hormonal contraceptive implant, complete abstinence (if genuinely followed)) or consistent use of a barrier method such as male or female condoms plus oral progestin contraceptives for the duration of the study. Non-surgically sterilized men must agree to abstain from sexual intercourse for the duration of the study or use condoms for contraception for the duration of the study.
Hemoglobin concentration equal or greater than 10 g/dL
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
24 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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