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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01348282
Other study ID # TRIANT-TE
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
First received April 18, 2011
Last updated March 31, 2014
Start date May 2011
Est. completion date March 2014

Study information

Verified date March 2014
Source Fundacio Lluita Contra la SIDA
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Spain: Ministry of Health
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The current project proposes the comparison of two pharmacologic strategies as adjunctive treatments for the improvement of HIV-associated neurocognitive disruption, additionally to use of HAART. The investigators propose the use of the compound that has shown greatest benefits in this context to date, the lithium, versus the use of a well-tolerated and promising drug in other pathologies with neurocognitive affectation, such as Alzheimer or Parkinson diseases, which is the rivastigmine. In those other diseases, this second compound has recently offered a good tolerability, but also benefits on attention, memory and other neurocognitive areas. Both study groups, patients on therapy with lithium and patients on therapy with rivastigmine, will be compared to a control group, which will not initiate any other treatment (therefore only continuing antiretroviral therapy). The investigators are aware that this proposal will offer new relevant data for the study of neurocognitive improvement in HIV infection, as well will allow a better knowledge of clinical management of HIV-infected patients with CNS disease, an aspect that is a common clinical concern today.


Description:

Adjunctive treatments based on neurocognitive improvement for HIV-infected patients with CNS disruption have consisted essentially of neurostimulant or neuroprotective treatments. Reports published to date have involved valproic acid, peptide T, CPI-1189, selegiline, memantine, minocycline and lithium. Regarding valproic acid, two trials have confirmed lack of benefit using this compound on HIV-associated neurocognitive decline. In case of peptide T, CPI-1189, selegiline, memantine and minocycline, although their potential mechanisms on brain follow different pathways, trend towards improvement on neurocognitive functioning has been observed. Nonetheless, results on those trials are particularly based on a short term and, moreover, mild connections with benefits on neurocognitive and functional measures have been established. The lithium has been the compound showing clearest benefits on this regard. Two reports have consistently demonstrated benefits on neurocognitive performance using this neuroprotective agent, both in patients with HIV and showing impairment previously. However, lithium is well known to be a drug not easily incorporated in routine practice, at least further than in a psychiatry context. In addition, adverse events related to their use are relatively frequent, and therefore clinical follow-up must be especially controlled. Besides, lithium concentrations are also a concerning aspect considering its use, and drug plasma levels are recommended to be performed throughout the therapy application.

For all these reasons, the current project proposes the comparison of two pharmacologic strategies as adjunctive treatments for the improvement of HIV-associated neurocognitive disruption, additionally to use of HAART. The investigators propose the use of the compound that has shown greatest benefits in this context to date, the lithium, versus the use of a well-tolerated and promising drug in other pathologies with neurocognitive affectation, such as Alzheimer or Parkinson diseases, which is the rivastigmine. In those other diseases, this second compound has recently offered a good tolerability, but also benefits on attention, memory and other neurocognitive areas. Furthermore, in the case of this project, rivastigmine is suggested to be used through a transdermal system patch, a fact that can provide suitability and comfortability with regard to the selected administration method. Both study groups, patients on therapy with lithium and patients on therapy with rivastigmine, will be compared to a control group, which will not initiate any other treatment (therefore only continuing antiretroviral therapy). The investigators are aware that this proposal will offer new relevant data for the study of neurocognitive improvement in HIV infection, as well will allow a better knowledge of clinical management of HIV-infected patients with CNS disease, an aspect that is a common clinical concern today.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 33
Est. completion date March 2014
Est. primary completion date March 2014
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Age ranged from 20 to 75 years old

- Correct understanding of study objectives

- Written consent signed

- HIV infection confirmed by Western Blot or two ELISA tests

- Existence of an HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder according to the diagnosis classification offered by Antinori and cols (Neurology, 2007)

- Being on antiretroviral treatment.

- Spanish/Catalan speaker.

Exclusion Criteria:

- To be on a treatment that may interact pharmacologically with any of the new drugs used in study arms.

- Breastfeeding, pregnancy or fertile women willing to be pregnant.

- Renal failure or severe cardiovascular disease.

- Weakness, dehydration or severe sodium depletion.

- Sick sinus syndrome or cardiac conduction disturbances (sinoatrial block or atrioventricular block).

- Active duodenal or gastric ulcer.

- Urinary obstruction.

- Epilepsy.

- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Lithium
lithium, in tablets, beginning a 2-daily 400 mg dose, and changing further adjusting the dose according to drug levels in serum.
Rivastigmine
rivastigmine, in transdermal patch administration, beginning a once-daily 4.6 mg dose, and changing further increasing the dose up to once-daily 9.5 mg.

Locations

Country Name City State
Spain Fundació LLuita contra la SIDA Badalona Barcelona

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Fundacio Lluita Contra la SIDA

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Spain, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Percentage of persons with neurocognitive impairment in the different study groups The main variable to consider is the existence of HIV-associated neurocognitive impairment. Therefore, the percentage of persons with neurocognitive impairment in different study groups will be the main variable that will report on the improvement associated with new treatments. From screening to month 12 No
Secondary Adverse events associated with the initiation of therapy and toxicity parameters Week 2, month 1, 3, 6, 9, 12 Yes
Secondary Emotional variables Depression and anxiety symptoms will be assessed by HADS questionnaire. Baseline, month 3, 6, 12. No
Secondary Functional variables A total of six scales assessing functional interference regarding activities of daily living, as well as self-reported neurocognitive functioning, will be measured. Baseline, month 3, 6, 12. No
Secondary Quality of life variables Four dimensions concerning quality of life, evaluated by MOS-HIV questionnaire, and satisfaction scales, based on treatments and clinical status, will be evaluated. Baseline, month 3, 6, 12. No
Secondary Demographics Baseline No
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