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About
Advances in antiretroviral therapy (ART) have resulted in increased survival of the HIV-infected population; however, this gain in longevity is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Although ART and traditional risk factors contribute to CVD in this population, heightened markers of immune activation, inflammation, and coagulation independently predict morbidity and mortality, suggesting that dysregulation of these systems plays a significant role in the increased risk of CVD. The investigators believe that platelet activation is an important driver in HIV-associated immune activation, inflammation, and coagulation, leading to an increased CVD pathophysiology and risk. Platelets initiate thrombus formation and also play a key role in vascular inflammation by releasing pro-inflammatory mediators and cross-talking with other relevant cell types including leukocytes. Researchers have described platelet hyperreactivity in chronic HIV infection. Importantly, the investigators demonstrated that one week of anti-platelet therapy (aspirin) decreased platelet activation and immune activation, with an improved trend in inflammation and immune parameters. The overall hypothesis is that platelet activation is a major driver of immune activation, inflammation, and thrombosis in ART-treated HIV infected patients. The purpose of the proposed proof-of-concept study is to understand the mechanism(s) by which anti-platelet therapy improves immune and inflammatory parameters in chronic HIV infection. To test this, the immune modulating and anti-inflammatory effects of 24 weeks of the anti-platelet drug aspirin as compared to the anti-platelet drug clopidogrel will be evaluated. Given their different mechanisms of action and inhibitory potency, the investigators can differentiate whether the potential benefits are mediated via inhibition of arachidonic acid (aspirin) or inhibition of ADP (clopidogrel) or by the antithrombotic activity. A secondary goal is to perform multidimensional assays of platelet activity and thrombogenicity alongside immune activation assays and careful assessments of traditional risk factors and medication regimens, to understand which parameters are highly associated with thrombogenicity.
Full description
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 40 HIV-1 infected participants on stable ART randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to aspirin 81mg daily vs clopidogrel 75mg daily vs placebo for 24 weeks. A subset of patients in each arm will participate in a sub-study to evaluate thrombogenicity, to be performed prior to the first study treatment and at 24 weeks of study treatment. 10 HIV uninfected control subjects will participate the study to evaluate baseline characteristics.
The primary endpoint is to determine the impact of aspirin as compared to clopidogrel on immune activation and inflammation in HIV infected, ART treated adults. This will be determined by measuring the change in the clinically relevant soluble marker of inflammation sCD14 over 24 weeks of study drug. Secondary objectives will be to measure safety and tolerability, to measure the effects of study drugs on important soluble markers of inflammation (sCD163, IL-6, d-dimer, sTNFRI and II), by measuring monocyte subsets (CD14, CD16, CD69), by measuring platelet activation by light transmission aggregometry, monocyte-platelet aggregates, and soluble CD40L, by measuring clot formation kinetics by thromboelastography, and in a subset of patients, by measuring thrombogenicity by Badimon Chamber and cholesterol uptake by monocytes.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
HIV infected participants:
Inclusion Criteria:
NOTE: Modifications of ART dosing during the 12 weeks prior to entry are permitted. In addition, the change in formulation (eg, from standard formulation to fixed dose combination or single tablet regimen) or dosing (eg, from once a day to twice a day) is allowed within 12 weeks prior to entry. Within-class single drug substitution (eg, switch from nevirapine to efavirenz or from atazanavir to darunavir), are not allowed within 12 weeks prior to entry. No other changes in ART in the 12 weeks prior to entry are permitted.
A. At least one HIV-1 RNA test result obtained at any time point greater than 48 weeks prior to study entry must be BLQ and must be performed by any FDA-approved assay at a CLIA-certified laboratory.
AND B. All HIV-1 RNA tests reported during the 48 weeks prior to study entry must be BLQ and must be performed by any FDA-approved assay at a CLIA-certified laboratory.
NOTE: A single RNA "blip" of ≤500 copies/mL is permissible if RNA levels most recent before and after (may include the screening HIV-1 RNA test) are BLQ for the assay.
The following laboratory values obtained within 45 days prior to study entry by any US laboratory that has a CLIA certification or its equivalent.
Female study volunteers of reproductive potential (pre-menopausal women who have not had a sterilization procedure (eg, hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, tubal ligation, or salpingectomy)) must have a negative serum or urine pregnancy test performed within 24 hours before initiating the protocol-specified medication(s) unless otherwise specified by product labeling. Women are considered menopausal if they have not had a menses for at least 12 months and have a FSH (follicle stimulating hormone) of greater than 40 IU/L or, if FSH testing is not available, they have had amenorrhea for 24 consecutive months.
If the female volunteer is not of reproductive potential (women who are menopausal, defined as not having had a menses for at least 12 months with an FSH of greater than 40 IU/L, or if FSH testing is not available, have had amenorrhea for 24 consecutive months, or women who have undergone surgical sterilization, (eg, hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, tubal ligation or salpingectomy)), she is eligible without requiring the use of a contraceptive method. Acceptable documentation of sterilization is subject reported history of hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, tubal ligation, tubal micro-insert, menopause, or the partner with vasectomy/azoospermia.
If participating in sexual activity that could lead to pregnancy, the female study volunteer must be willing to use contraception while receiving protocol-specified medication(s) and for the washout period of 4 weeks. At least one of the following methods MUST be used:
No documented opportunistic infections within 24 weeks prior to study entry
Karnofsky performance score >70 within 45 days prior to study entry
Ability and willingness of subject or legal guardian/representative to provide written informed consent.
Willingness to refrain from the use of aspirin or any aspirin-related product (other than the study drug), including NSAIDs, from time of screening visit through the end of the 24 week trial.
NOTE: Acetaminophen-based products may be used before and during the trial when analgesics are required.
Exclusion Criteria:
• Current malignancy (except non-melanoma cancer of the skin not requiring systemic chemotherapy or radiation therapy).
NOTE: Carcinoma in situ of the cervix or anus is not considered exclusionary.
NOTE: Routine standard of care, including hepatitis A and/or B, human papilloma virus, influenza, pneumococcal, and tetanus vaccines are permitted if administered at least 7 days before study entry and before biomarker/peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) blood collections.
NOTE: Recurrent herpes simplex virus (HSV) is not exclusionary. Subjects on antiviral prophylaxis for HSV or VZV are encouraged to remain on treatment for the duration of the study if medically feasible.
HIV-uninfected participants:
Inclusion criteria:
• HIV uninfected
Exclusion criteria:
• Current malignancy (except non-melanoma cancer of the skin not requiring systemic chemotherapy or radiation therapy).
NOTE: Carcinoma in situ of the cervix or anus is not considered exclusionary.
NOTE: Routine standard of care, including hepatitis A and/or B, human papilloma virus, influenza, pneumococcal, and tetanus vaccines are permitted if administered at least 7 days before study entry and before biomarker/peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) blood collections.
NOTE: Recurrent herpes simplex virus (HSV) is not exclusionary. Subjects on antiviral prophylaxis for HSV or VZV are encouraged to remain on treatment for the duration of the study if medically feasible.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
27 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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