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Functional Cure Study of HIV-infected Patients

K

Kaohsiung Medical University

Status

Completed

Conditions

HIV

Treatments

Procedure: cART course

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02794545
KMUHIRB-20140058

Details and patient eligibility

About

Although combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) can significantly reduce morbidity and mortality, it still fails to eradicate HIV. Given the difficulty for eradication of HIV, functional cure is more likely to achieve the goal. In recent breakthrough scientific reports, there already existed several examples of HIV-infected cases achieving the status of functional cure only through early administration of cART in newborns or early infected cases. From Taiwan centers for disease control (CDC) reports and our clinical experiences, more and more young men got HIV infection and the most important finding is the investigators can find some of them are newly infected, let's say, within six months.

Full description

This study targets on this newly HIV- infected cohort and urging them to receive cART in order to achieve the possible status of HIV function cure. After 3~5 years period of treatment, cART will be discontinued after laboratory evaluation and functional cure is anticipated. These patients can achieve good life quality. In addition to elimination of the risk for HIV transmission, the cART expense of the government can be reduced on the large scale. The core of this study aims at setting up a precise and standard laboratory methodology for detecting the newly infected cases and predicting the time to stop cART. Once these assay methods are well established, they can be widely applied to assess the previous cases with long term cART for the prediction of the appropriate time to stop cART.

Thru the conventional HIV tests (within the sero-conversion stage), the detection rate of early infection is only 5-10 %. Therefore it is very desperately important to develop more tools for the diagnosis of early infection.

In addition to the standard method for detecting HIV infection, the investigators will use the HIV p24 Ag test and detuned Enzyme-linked Immunoblotting assay (EIA) assay for detecting early infection. For naïve patients, the investigators will also check the resistance testing for antiretroviral drugs in order to adjust and choose the susceptible cART for the patients. During the cART period, the investigators will follow up these patients for checking quantity of HIV RNA and proviral DNA (HIV DNA) from Peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMCs) in their blood. After three to five years of cART, if their HIV RNA is not detected and HIV DNA is very low, the investigators will draw the blood from the patients to isolate the Cluster of Differentiation 4 (CD4) receptors + T cells and co-cultivated with PBMCs from the healthy cohorts to evaluate the existence of HIV infectivity or not in the cART treated cases. If there is no infectivity, the investigators will stop cART. After stopping cART, the investigators will follow up these cases every six months till at least two years to check their HIV antibody, HIV RNA and HIV DNA from PBMCs to observe whether HIV recurrence occurs to them.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 35 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. HIV
  2. Age over 20 years old to 35 years old.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Refuse to accept cases HAART
  2. Interruption of HAART cases during treatment.
  3. Can not rule taking HAART drugs, leading to treatment failure cases.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 1 patient group

Recent infection patient
Experimental group
Description:
The patient who infected with HIV-1 and screened out by P24 ELISA, and they would receives early cART course.
Treatment:
Procedure: cART course

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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