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The Effect of Hyperbilirubinemia on CV Disease, Neurocog Function and Renal Function (SSAT044)

S

St Stephens Aids Trust

Status

Completed

Conditions

HIV

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01475240
SSAT 044

Details and patient eligibility

About

Use of some protease inhibitors is associated with elevations of a blood pigment called bilirubin. This may occasionally lead to yellowing of the eyes (scleral icterus) or jaundice, but in the general population bilirubin elevations have been shown to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties that could be associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular or other disease events.

Inflammation may also be relevant to neurocognitive impairment in HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) infection hence elevations of bilirubin may also be protective against neurocognitive impairment.

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of hyperbilirubinemia (HBR) on risk of heart and renal diseases, and cognitive function.

Full description

Use of some protease inhibitors is associated with unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia as a result of inhibition of the UGT1A1 enzyme.

Elevated levels of unconjugated bilirubin are best characterized among individuals with Gilbert syndrome, which is the most common inherited cause of unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia, present in 3-10% of the general population. Gilbert syndrome arises through variants in the UGT1A1 enzyme, thus these PIs induce a biochemical picture similar to Gilbert syndrome. Although elevations of bilirubin may occasionally lead to scleral icterus or jaundice, cohort studies of individuals with Gilbert syndrome indicate bilirubin elevations may have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties and are associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular events.

Inflammation may also be relevant to cardiovascular (CV) risk, neurocognitive impairment and renal disease in HIV infection. This study seeks to investigate any association between antiretroviral associated HBR and CV risk markers, neurocognitive impairment and renal dysfunction

Enrollment

101 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. The ability to understand and sign a written informed consent form, prior to participation in any screening procedure and must be willing to comply with all study requirements.
  2. Documented HIV-1 infection.
  3. >18 years of age
  4. Stable on PI based therapy with TDF/FTC or ABC/3TC > 6 months with either normal bilirubin or bilirubin >2.5 X upper limit
  5. Stable for > 3 months on lipid lowering therapy, anticoagulant, hormone supplements, metformin (for lipohypertrophy) or other metabolic therapies
  6. No known or past history of cardiovascular disease, neurocognitive disorder or renal disease.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Grade 1-2 Bilirubin
  2. Known CV disease (angina, coronary artery disease, peripheral vascular disease, stroke, congestive cardiac failure or myocardial dysfunction), Diabetes Mellitus, antihypertensive therapy
  3. Chronic NSAID use including low dose aspirin
  4. Known renal or CNS or neurocognitive disease
  5. HIV RNA >400copies/ml in last 6 months
  6. Change of antiretroviral Therapy in last 6 months
  7. Active Hepatitis B (sAg +ve) or hepatitis C (detectable HCV RNA,, treated or cleared Hepatitis C permitted if infection and/or treatment > 6months previous)
  8. Use of anabolic steroids. Cutaneous administered testosterone supplements stable for >3 months for documented hypogonadism permitted. Oral contraceptives stable for 3 months permitted.

Trial design

101 participants in 2 patient groups

Group 1: Controls
Description:
HIV-infected patients on stable \> 6 months on TDF/FTC or ABC/3TC plus PI/r based ARV regimen with normal bilirubin
Group 2: Cases
Description:
HIV-infected patients on stable \>6 months on TDF/FTC or ABC/3TC plus PI/r based ARV regimen with HBR (\>2.5 X upper limit)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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