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About
Background:
HIV attacks the immune system. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a combination of drugs used for treating HIV infection. For some people, ART drugs stop working against their HIV. Researchers want to see if a different form of the drug tenofovir (an ART drug currently approved by the FDA), combined with another drug, may help people whose HIV is resistant to ART. This combination pill is called F/TAF
Objective:
To study the safety and efficacy of the drug F/TAF, when used with other ART, for people whose HIV infection has been hard to control with available medicines.
Eligibility:
People age 14 years and older who have HIV infection and are enrolled in the DOTCOM (14-I-0009) protocol.
Design:
Participants will be screened with physical exam, medical history, and blood and urine tests.
Participants will stay in the hospital for at least 10 days. For the first 9 days, they will take F/TAF by mouth along with their usual ART drugs.
In the hospital, they will repeat the screening tests.
Participants will have a DEXA scan, an x-ray that measures calcium and other minerals in the bones. Participants will lie on a soft table while the scanner passes over the lower spine and hips.
Participants will get a supply of F/TAF and some new ART drugs to take at home.
Participants will have follow-up visits in 1, 2, 4, 8, and 12 weeks. After the 12-week visit, they will come back about every 3 months for about 1 year.
At these visits, participants will repeat the screening tests. They will discuss any problems taking their ART drugs. They may have another DEXA scan.
Full description
Despite the success of antiretroviral therapy (ART), a subset of HIV-1-infected patients have uncontrolled viremia, multiple drug class resistance, and limited treatment options. Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) forms part of most ART regimens, however its long-term use is associated with renal tubulopathy and reduced bone mineral density. Viral mutations (eg, K65R, multiple thymidine analog mutations (TAMs) can confer resistance or reduced susceptibility to TDF.
Tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) is an investigational oral prodrug of tenofovir. When compared to TDF, TAF demonstrated lower plasma tenofovir concentrations and more potent antiviral activity at approximately one-tenth of the dose. TAF has the advantage of reduced tenofovir exposure to the renal tubules and bone, potentially resulting in fewer kidney and bone effects. As with TDF, TAF has potent activities against hepatitis B virus (HBV), and may be a treatment option for patients with HIV/HBV co-infections. Phase 2 trials have demonstrated the non-inferiority of TAF to TDF in treating HIV-1 infection in ART-naive patients. Smaller reductions in bone mineral density were measured with TAF than TDF. The most common adverse events were nausea and diarrhea.
This single-arm, single-site, open-label trial will explore the safety and efficacy of TAF in a fixed combination with emtricitabine (FTC) (F/TAF, Gilead Sciences Inc.) as part of a salvage antiretroviral regimen for HIV-1-infected adults and adolescents (greater than or equal to 14 years) who experienced virologic failure. The study will recruit patients who have failed TDF-containing regimens or cannot take TDF (due to resistance mutations or risk of renal injury) and for whom abacavir/lamivudine (ABC/3TC) is not an optimal alternative. Eligible patients will begin 9 days of inpatient directly observed therapy (DOT) with F/TAF plus their pre-enrollment background regimen. On Day 10, patients will switch to F/TAF plus OBT while waiting for the results of Day 10 HIV RNA results. Patients with an HIV RNA decline of <0.5 log10 from Day 1 to Day 10 will discontinue F/TAF, end their study participation, and continue OBT (with TDF/FTC or ABC/3TC in place of F/TAF, as appropriate) under the 14-I-0009 protocol. Patients with a greater than or equal to 0.5 log10 decline in HIV RNA will continue on F/TAF + OBT for 48 weeks, with periodic outpatient assessments of adherence, safety, renal function, bone mineral density, HIV RNA, and CD4 T cell counts. Switching of one or more drugs in an ART regimen due to inadequate viral response will require inpatient DOT under 14-I-0009.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION
Age greater than or equal to 14 years
Documented HIV-1 infection (written documentation of positive standard ELISA or rapid HIV-1/HIV-2 antibody test with confirmatory Western Blot, or documentation of repeated HIV RNA of > 1,000 copies/mL)
Concurrent enrollment in the DOTCOM (14-I-0009) protocol
For females of childbearing potential, willingness to use effective contraception for the duration of the study
Willingness to be hospitalized for 10-15 days (with potential for day passes)
Willingness to have blood samples stored for future research that may include genetic testing
Multiple ART failure as defined by at least one of the following criteria:
Where neither TDF nor ABC are optimal NRTI options as defined by at least one of the following criteria:
EXCLUSION
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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