Cryptococcal Meningitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Implementation and Evaluation of a Screening Strategy to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality Due to Cryptoccocal Meningo-encephalitis in ART Naive AIDS Patients With <100 CD4 Count at the Day Hospital of the Yaounde Central Hospital, Cameroon
The aim of the study is to evaluate systematic pre-antiretroviral cryptococcal antigen screening and pre-emptive fluconazole therapy in antigen positive patients, as a strategy to reduce morbidity and mortality due to AIDS associated cryptococcal meningitis in patients starting antiretroviral therapy at <100 CD4 in Cameroon.
Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a leading cause of death in AIDS patients in much of the
developing world, responsible for up to 500,000 deaths each year in sub-Saharan Africa alone.
Introduction of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has reduced the number of cases of cryptococcal
meningitis in the developed world. Unfortunately, in many low resource settings, patients
continue to present late to ART treatment programs with advanced immunosuppression, and many
die of HIV-related illness in the weeks just prior to, and months following, initiation of
ART. Cryptococcal meningitis causes many of these deaths, and is also a heavy burden on
healthcare facilities. Treatment of the disease remains inadequate, with an acute mortality
of between 20 and 50%, even with the best current treatment.
Many of these cases of cryptococcal meningitis may be preventable. Recent research has shown
that routine screening for sub-clinical infection, using a simple test (cryptococcal antigen
or CRAG) in patients presenting to ART programmes, can identify which patients are at risk of
developing cryptococcal meningitis. Once identified, these patients could then be given safe
oral "pre-emptive" treatment to prevent them developing a severe form of the disease. This
strategy has many advantages over the alternative preventative measure, called generalised
primary prophylaxis, which involves giving all profoundly immune depressed HIV-infected
patients preventative treatment. Using a primary prophylaxis strategy, large numbers of
patients are given medication, many of whom don't need it, and there are problems of cost and
development of drug resistance and drug interactions. In a targeted strategy, only patients
who benefit most from the treatment will be given medication.
The investigators propose to study the feasibility and effectiveness of CRAG screening and
targeted pre-emptive treatment in patients entering ART treatment programmes in Yaoundé,
Cameroon using a newly approved, easier to use, lateral flow format dipstick test (LFA). In
the planned study, 400 patients will be screened using the CRAG test prior to starting ART.
Patients with a positive cryptococcal antigen will be consented for a lumbar puncture (LP)
for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, and, if found to have cryptococcal meningitis, and
eligible, they will be randomised and included in the complementary clinical trial "Advancing
Cryptococcal Treatment in Africa" (ACTA) [ISRCTN45035509, ANRS12275] and treated according to
the study protocol. Positive cryptococcal antigen patients with no evidence of neurological
disease following lumbar puncture, or who decline a diagnostic LP will receive a tapering
course of fluconazole. Cryptococcal antigen negative patients will not receive any additional
antifungal therapy. All CRAG screened patients will be started on standard ART 2 to 4 weeks
after screening and followed for up to 1 year, depending on antigen status, to determine
whether any patients go on to develop clinical cryptococcal meningitis.
General objective
- To implement and evaluate systematic cryptococcal antigen screening as a strategy to reduce
cryptococcal meningoencephalitis morbidity and mortality among HIV-infected patients
initiating antiretroviral therapy at less than 100 CD4 cell counts at the Day Hospital of the
Yaoundé Central Hospital in Cameroon
Specific objectives
- To determine the prevalence of cryptococcal antigenaemia and/or antigenuria among
HIV-infected patients presenting with less than 100 CD4 cell count
- To determine the prevalence of laboratory confirmed cryptococcal meningoencephalitis
among patients found to be CRAG positive
- To determine the incidence of newly diagnosed, and relapsing, laboratory confirmed
cryptococcal meningitis in the first year after starting ART in all screened patients.
- To determine mortality within the first year of ART among patients screened for CRAG
Study design and number of patients A prospective cohort study of 400 ART naive patients
presenting at entry of ART programme with less than 100 CD4 cell count/ml will be screened
for CRAG using LFA in serum and urine and followed up for one year.
Study interventions Main intervention of the study will be cryptococcal antigen (CRAG)
screening. All eligible patients will be screened at baseline using an LFA, a point of care
(POC) dipstick test, on serum and/or plasma, and urine. Aliquots will be saved for later
titering of CRAG positive samples. All subsequent treatments and patient management will be
according to local guidelines and/or internationally accepted best practice standards.
Subsequent management Cryptococcal antigen negative participants: All CRAG negative
participants will commence ART once counselling and pre-ART work-up are complete within an
estimated time of 2 weeks in accordance with current Cameroon National AIDS control programme
guidelines. There will be no further interventions. The participant will be seen at the
outpatient clinic on the 2nd and 4th weeks following screening, then routinely according to
the day hospital roster, and finally, every three months up to one year after the date of
screening.
Cryptococcal antigen positive participants: All CRAG positive participants will have a
careful symptom screen (headache/altered mental status), and will be asked to consent for an
LP for CSF analysis: If cryptococcal meningitis is diagnosed by Indian ink and/or culture,
and the patients is eligible, the patient may be included in the clinical trial "Advancing
Cryptococcal Treatment in Africa" (ACTA) and treated according to ACTA protocol. If a patient
is ineligible, or declines to be included in the ACTA trial, they will be treated with short
course amphotericin B (one week) combined with oral fluconazole 800mg/day for two weeks, then
8 weeks of fluconazole 40mg/day and 200mg/day thereafter.
If LP is negative for cryptococcal meningitis (or LP refused), patients will receive
Fluconazole 800 mg/day for 2 weeks then 400 mg/day for 8 weeks then 200 mg/day (based on
current best practice).
Patients will commence ART (efavirenz based) 2-4 weeks after starting antifungal therapy, in
accordance with current Cameroon National AIDS control programme guidelines. Follow-up will
be for one year. Patients will be seen at the outpatient clinic every two weeks for the first
ten weeks, then at three month intervals. During the outpatient visits, in case of any
opportunistic infection occurrence, they will be managed according to local current practice
of the Day Hospital. Women of child-bearing age will be proposed contraception (preferably
barrier methods) during the period of follow up.
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