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GMB: Study of Truvada (TDF+FTC) or Emtricitabine (FTC) Alone Versus HAART Interruption in HIV-Infected Patients With Resistance

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Gilead Sciences

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

HIV Infections

Treatments

Procedure: No HAART
Drug: Truvada (TDF+FTC) alone
Drug: FTC alone

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT00362687
GS-ES-164-0151

Details and patient eligibility

About

Many patients who already harbor drug-resistant HIV require interruption of HAART due to poor compliance, poor quality of life, toxicity or development of resistance. In these patients interruption of HAART has a negative impact on patient immune status due to the reemergence of wild-type virus which is in general more pathogenic than HIV isolates containing resistance mutations. There is a need for "bridging" antiretroviral regimens that might prolong time off conventional HAART whilst waiting for a new regimen that is either fully suppressive or less toxic or less demanding for the patient.

Full description

Virological failure associated with the appearance of resistant mutations is still common in patients receiving HAART. When HAART fails patients and clinicians can chose from three different courses of action:

  1. Switch therapy to a new salvage regimen based on the results of resistance testing.

    Success of the new salvage regimen is maximized if the new regimen includes antiretroviral drugs without cross-resistance with previous failed drugs or, preferably,new classes of drugs. In general, rescue regimens are more complicated for patients due to its higher pill burden; more frequent dosing and sometimes need for parenteral therapy (Enfuvirtide).

  2. Stop therapy. This strategy is feasible in patient with relatively preserved immune function. Time off antiretroviral therapy would be highly dependent on previous nadir CD4 cell count (the lowest the nadir, the more rapidly patients loses CD4 cells). In patients with multidrug resistant virus this strategy is used with the goal of achieving virus reversion towards wild-type forms. Reversion towards wild-type virus would theoretically "resensitize" HIV to prior failed drugs. Unfortunately, a number of investigations have suggested that the loss of CD4 cell count occurred during the time off therapy might not be regained after starting rescue therapy. In addition, reversion towards wild type virus does not appear to be associated with a more favourable outcome of rescue therapy.

  3. Maintain failing therapy. This strategy has the potential advantage of decreasing the rate of CD4 cell loss. It is known that certain mutations of HIV decrease viral fitness and produce a less pathogenic virus. Consequently, compared to wild-type virus, CD4 destruction is decreased in the presence of resistance mutations. The very important risk inherent to this strategy is the accumulation of new antiretroviral mutations if the regimen is maintained. Due to cross-resistance among antiretroviral drugs, accumulation of new mutations decreases the chances of success of a new salvage regimen.

Choosing among these three different strategies depends on a number of important factors.

  1. Availability of antiretroviral drugs active against resistant HIV isolates. Clinicians would be more prone to switch to a new salvage regimen if the new regimen contains a new class of drugs and/or at least three drugs without cross resistance with the antiretroviral included in the failing regimen. This scenario is very likely after first or second regimen failure. However, after third regimen failure the possibilities of including at least three active drugs dramatically decrease. For deep salvage the possibilities of constructing a viable rescue regimen often depends on enrolling the patient in a clinical trial of a new antiretroviral (for example CCR5 inhibitors). Enrolment in the trial very often implies that patients have to wait for an undefined period of time until the trial starts.
  2. Willingness of patient to switch to a more complicated regimen. After second regimen failure, rescue therapies involve a higher pill burden, more frequent dosing and, in a substantial number of cases, the need of parenteral therapy with enfuvirtide. In this situation it is possible that the patient prefer not to start the new therapy due to the negative impact of the new regimen in his quality of life.
  3. Immune status of the patient. In patients with low CD4 cell count stopping therapy can put the patient at risk of developing an opportunistic disease. In general patients and clinicians are reluctant to stop therapy if the current CD4 cell count is below 200-250 cells/mL.

Apart from the setting of virological failure HAART interruption might be needed in patients with well controlled viral replication (HIV viremia persistently below 50 copies/ mL). Possible reasons for HAART interruption in this scenario are:

  1. Toxicity of current regimen.
  2. Patient desire (for example travel abroad).
  3. Poor quality of life related to treatment issues.
  4. Poor adherence to current HAART regimen and an impending risk of developing resistance mutations. When a patient stop HAART due to these reasons, wild-type HIV re-emerges with the consequent loss of CD4 cells. Depending on the immune status of the patient and prior CD4 cell nadir time off therapy might be quite limited.

Enrollment

50 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

HIV-1 infection documented by confirmed positive HIV-1 antibody test and/or positive PCR for HIV-1 RNA.

  • Adult patients (over 18 years of age).

  • Available genotype (current or historical) showing M184V and (≥ 2 TAMs or K65R).

  • CD4 cell count ≥ 350 cells/mL.

  • Patient request HAART interruption due to any of the following:

    1. Patient is receiving a suppressive HAART regimen but has problems with adherence,quality of life or toxicity AND there is no alternative simpler, less toxic regimen (typically patients with substantial resistance and good virological control while receiving multiple antiretrovirals).
    2. Due to resistance, patient is receiving a non-suppressive HAART regimen but patient is not willing to change to a new, already available, more complicated optimized salvage regimen (typically 3rd or 4th line of therapy).
  • For women of childbearing potential, negative urine pregnancy test at screening visit.

  • Agreement to take part in the study and sign the informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

Patients receiving a non-registered antiretroviral (ARV) drug.

  • Patients who have < 50 HIV-RNA copies/mL while receiving an NNRTI.
  • Serum HBsAg positive and patient is receiving an anti-HBV active nucleoside/nucleotide.
  • Hypersensitivity to one of the components of the dosage forms of TDF or FTC, or previous history of intolerance to one of these drugs.
  • Known history of drug abuse or chronic alcohol consumption that in the clinician opinion contraindicates participation in the study.
  • Women who are pregnant or breast feeding or females of childbearing potential who do not use an adequate method of contraception according to the investigator's judgment.
  • Current active opportunistic infection or documented infection within the previous 4 weeks.
  • Documented active malignant disease (excluding Kaposi sarcoma limited to the skin).
  • Renal disease with creatinine clearance < 50 mL/min.
  • Concomitant use of nephrotoxic or immuno-suppressive drugs (should be stopped prior to enrollment)
  • Receiving on-going therapy with systemic corticosteroids, Interleukin-2 (IL-2) or chemotherapy.
  • Patients who are not to be included in the study according to the investigator's criterion.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

50 participants in 2 patient groups

1
Experimental group
Description:
Truvada 1 tablet once a day.
Treatment:
Procedure: No HAART
Drug: Truvada (TDF+FTC) alone
2
Experimental group
Description:
Emtricitabine 1 capsule once a day
Treatment:
Procedure: No HAART
Drug: FTC alone

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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