Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The primary objective of this study is to use a well-characterized pediatric AMPATH cohort, with detailed medication-taking, drug level, and clinical data, to longitudinally evaluate treatment failure and drug resistance to improve long-term care for HIV-infected children in Kenya and other RLS. Examining treatment failure and drug resistance emergence in children on ART and what factors impact these negative outcomes, will provide needed data to critically evaluate the efficacy of current ART, weight-based pediatric drug dosing guidelines, and recommendations for subsequent therapies. The objective is to specifically characterize how non-adherence leads to a lack of viral suppression and to drug resistance evolution, and how this characterization can inform interventions to improve adherence and increase treatment success.
Full description
Resistance to antiretroviral therapy (ART) hampers effective treatment of pediatric HIV infection and can undermine long-term clinical care outcomes. In resource-limited settings (RLS), where 90% of the world's HIV-infected children live, the risk and impact of ART failure and resistance development are particularly significant due to limited treatment monitoring, restricted medication options and lifelong ART needs, from birth through adolescence and into adulthood. Children in RLS therefore face serious clinical consequences when their virus is not suppressed, but few longitudinal data are available to inform pediatric clinical guidelines or direct interventions to minimize those risks. How specific patterns of medication non-adherence or challenges with appropriate ART dosing might impact ART failure and the development of drug resistance are poorly understood for children in RLS. The primary objective of this study is to use a well-characterized pediatric AMPATH cohort, with detailed medication-taking, drug level, and clinical data, to longitudinally evaluate treatment failure and drug resistance to improve long-term care for HIV-infected children in Kenya and other RLS. Examining treatment failure and drug resistance emergence in children on ART and what factors impact these negative outcomes, will provide needed data to critically evaluate the efficacy of current ART, weight-based pediatric drug dosing guidelines, and recommendations for subsequent therapies. The objective is to specifically characterize how non-adherence leads to a lack of viral suppression and to drug resistance evolution, and how this characterization can inform interventions to improve adherence and increase treatment success. AMPATH cares for over 80,000 adult and pediatric HIV-infected patients in western Kenya, including over 2,800 children on ART.
The research objective of this application will be accomplished by pursuing the following five specific aims: Aim 1: Determine prevalence of viral failure and examine resistance mutations among a retrospective study cohort of 685 perinatally HIV-infected Kenyan children on 1st-line ART; Aim 2: Investigate associations between specific adherence patterns, ART drug levels and other demographic and clinical factors, with viral failure and drug resistance; Aim 3: Study long-term immunologic, virologic and drug resistance outcomes and their associations in prospectively re-enrolled study participants; Aim 4: Enhance analyses of viral failure, drug resistance accumulation and associated demographic and clinical factors by examining the longitudinal banked samples available for a subset of the study cohort (n=327); Aim 5: Develop a data-driven intervention algorithm to identify children at risk for viral failure and resistance.
The hypothesis of this study proposes that there will be high levels of treatment failure and drug resistance associated with patterns of non-adherence and inadequate drug levels.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Mental or physical incapacity of legal caregiver leading to inability to provide informed consent
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
499 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal