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About
The increased life expectancy of Patients Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) has increased the need for therapies for chronic conditions, such as chronic pain. Pain in the HIV population is often refractory and ends up being treated with chronic opioids, which are associated with adverse effects, including hyperalgesia, constipation, and risk of overdose. Naltrexone is an opioid antagonist used in the treatment of alcohol and opioid use disorders. Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN), naltrexone at a much lower dose, is thought to be an immune modulator and has been associated with an increased CD4 count in PLWHA. Repurposing this medication is relatively inexpensive and has the potential to expand access to treatment for a painful condition experienced in PLWHA. While there are many case reports on the efficacy of LDN in symptom reduction, there are only a small number of clinical trials that specifically examine pain and symptom relief.
This study will include patients who are not completely virologically controlled and will monitor the CD4 counts drawn as a part of routine care. If the CD4 count improves with LDN and with reduced symptoms, this could be a significant improvement in HIV therapy for symptom control. There have been studies showing cytokine reduction in fibromyalgia patients but they did not investigate the correlation with cytokines and pain relief. This study involves repurposing a drug used for substance use disorder to a medication with the potential to treat pain and improve symptoms for PLWHA.
Full description
More than one million people in the United States live with HIV. In 2018, Black/African Americans made up 42% of the new HIV diagnoses, while Hispanic persons accounted for 27%. Black/African Americans and Hispanics with an HIV diagnosis receive less care for treatment and maintenance of HIV than their Caucasian counterparts and are thus less likely to have adequate suppression of the virus. Many people living with HIV/AIDS have untreated chronic pain, which negatively affects their quality of life. Neuropathic (nerve) pain, including painful HIV neuropathy, is notoriously difficult to treat. Opioids (narcotics) are often used to treat chronic pain in patients, with inconsistent results. We now know that opioids for chronic pain are more consistently known for a multitude of side effects than effective long-term pain relief. Lesser-known side effects of chronic opioids include suppressing, or dampening, the immune system, making opioids particularly undesirable as a chronic therapy for pain in the HIV patient population. Other therapies for neuropathic pain have undesirable side effects. Naltrexone is FDA-approved for addiction and is not used to treat a medical disease. Low-dose naltrexone (LDN) is an off-label use of naltrexone with some evidence that it may help chronic pain, such as fibromyalgia and some types of neuropathic (nerve) pain. LDN is a much lower dose of naltrexone. It has to be compounded to 1/10 of the usual dose to be repurposed to treat pain. In this study, 40 adult patients with HIV will take low-dose naltrexone for 12 weeks to treat neuropathic pain. We will measure pain scores and markers of inflammation while they are taking LDN. Naltrexone repurposed as LDN has the potential to greatly enhance the quality of life of HIV patients. This is particularly meaningful given the healthcare disparities often associated with HIV.
Enrollment
Sex
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Allergy to naltrexone (not applicable to the control group)
Current use of any opioids, up to 10 days before the start of the study (not applicable to the control group)
Pregnant women
Nursing mothers and women of childbearing potential not using contraception known to be highly effective (not applicable for the control group). Highly effective contraception methods include a combination of any two of the following during the 12-week study period:
Bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, poorly controlled anxiety or depression
Diagnosis of liver disease, e.g. cirrhosis
Current diagnosis of either chronic kidney disease or acute kidney injury and/or a GFR <45 at baseline
Acute viral hepatitis A, B, C
Patients who self-report as having tested positive for COVID-19 or have been diagnosed with another viral illness within the past ten days.
Patients with a known or suspected diagnosis of long-term COVID
Active drug or alcohol use disorder
People who may require opioid therapy during the duration of the study, e.g. upcoming surgery
Transportation issues interfering with return study visits (NA for the control group)
Adults unable to consent
Prisoners
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Anne M McKenzie-Brown, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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