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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00000671
Other study ID # ACTG 117
Secondary ID 070V1AI454-009
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received November 2, 1999
Last updated March 11, 2011

Study information

Verified date August 1992
Source National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Federal Government
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

To compare the effectiveness and toxicity of didanosine (ddI) and zidovudine (AZT) in patients with AIDS or advanced AIDS-related complex (ARC) who have tolerated AZT therapy for 12 months or longer. Per amendment, asymptomatic patients with CD4 counts less than 200 cells/mm3 are eligible.

AZT is effective in reducing mortality in patients with AIDS who receive the drug after the first episode of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) and in patients with advanced ARC. However, AZT therapy has been associated with significant toxicities. In addition, the effectiveness of AZT appears to decrease during the second and third years of therapy. For these reasons, the development of alternative therapy that would be at least as effective but less toxic is of great importance. The drug ddI is an antiviral agent that inhibits replication of HIV with less apparent toxicity than AZT. Studies indicate that ddI remains active in the body for at least 12 hours; thus benefits of ddI might be achieved with a low frequency of drug administration.


Description:

AZT is effective in reducing mortality in patients with AIDS who receive the drug after the first episode of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) and in patients with advanced ARC. However, AZT therapy has been associated with significant toxicities. In addition, the effectiveness of AZT appears to decrease during the second and third years of therapy. For these reasons, the development of alternative therapy that would be at least as effective but less toxic is of great importance. The drug ddI is an antiviral agent that inhibits replication of HIV with less apparent toxicity than AZT. Studies indicate that ddI remains active in the body for at least 12 hours; thus benefits of ddI might be achieved with a low frequency of drug administration.

Two dose levels of ddI, each adjusted depending on patient's weight at study entry, are compared with a variable dosage regimen of AZT (the dose which the patient is tolerating at the time of study entry). Randomization is stratified by baseline CD4 cell count (less than 100 or 100-300) and Medical Center. This study continues for at least 12 months after the entry of the first subject. Patients randomized to AZT will receive orally. All patients randomized to AZT also receive a ddI placebo at 12 hour intervals. Patients randomized to ddI receive AZT placebo.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 750
Est. completion date
Est. primary completion date March 1992
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 12 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria

Concurrent Medication:

Required:

- Aerosolized pentamidine (300 mg every 4 weeks).

Allowed:

- Chronic suppressive treatment for toxoplasmosis, Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP), cryptococcal meningitis, herpes simplex virus infection.

- Ganciclovir for patients developing cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection while in study.

- Erythropoietin for patients under the relevant treatment IND.

- Treatment of opportunistic infections with other than sulfonamide-containing regimens.

- Aspirin, acetaminophen, or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents is discouraged, but is permitted for as short a period of time as possible.

- Chronic use of trimethoprim - sulfamethoxazole or other sulfonamide preparations is not encouraged while on study.

Patients must:

- Have had the diagnosis of AIDS or advanced AIDS related complex (ARC).

- Have received AZT therapy for at least 12 months, with a minimal daily dose of 500 mg/day and with no more than 60 days off AZT therapy within the 12 month period; medical records with documentation of AZT dosing must be provided.

- Provide informed consent (guardian as appropriate).

- Be available for follow-up for at least 6 months.

- Have the inclusion laboratory values within approximately 14 days of initiating therapy (except for CD4 cell counts).

- Patients whose AIDS-defining condition is Kaposi's sarcoma alone must have CD4 cell counts < 300 cells/mm3.

Allowed:

- Positive blood culture for Mycobacterium avium or Cytomegalovirus.

- Prior history of toxoplasmosis, Herpes simplex, Cryptococcus, or Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) requiring chronic suppressive therapy.

- Occasional premature atrial or ventricular contractions.

Prior Medication:

Required:

- Zidovudine (AZT) therapy for at least 12 months, with a minimal daily dose of 500 mg/day, and with no more than 60 days off AZT therapy within the 12-month period (documentation of AZT dosing must be provided).

Allowed:

- Intralesional agents.

Exclusion Criteria

Co-existing Condition:

Patients with the following are excluded:

- Psychological or emotional problems sufficient, in the investigator's opinion, to prevent adequate compliance with study therapy.

- AIDS-dementia complex = or > stage 2.

- Active AIDS defining opportunistic infections not specifically allowed.

- Intractable diarrhea.

- Grade 2 neuropathy, based on the Neuropathy Targeted Symptom Questionnaire, or any moderate abnormality indicative of peripheral neuropathy, particularly impaired sensation of sharp pain, light touch, or vibration in the lower extremities, distal extremity weakness, or distal extremity hyperreflexia.

- Prior history of acute pancreatitis within past 2 years or chronic pancreatitis.

- History of seizures within past 2 years or currently requiring anticonvulsants for control.

- History of past or current heart disease.

- Malignancy likely in the investigator's opinion to require cytotoxic chemotherapy during the expected course of this trial.

- Life expectancy < 3 months.

Concurrent Medication:

Excluded:

- Isoniazid (INH). Neurotoxic drugs. Oral acidifying agents.

Patients with the following are excluded:

- Psychological or emotional problems sufficient, in the investigator's opinion, to prevent adequate compliance with study therapy.

- AIDS-dementia complex = or > stage 2.

- Active AIDS defining opportunistic infections not specifically allowed.

- Intractable diarrhea.

- Prior history of acute pancreatitis within past 2 years or chronic pancreatitis.

- History of seizures within past 2 years or currently requiring anticonvulsants for control.

- History of past or current heart disease.

- Malignancy likely in the investigator's opinion to require cytotoxic chemotherapy during the expected course of this trial.

- Life expectancy = or < 3 months.

- Previous participation in any study of ddI, ddC or d4T.

Prior Medication:

Excluded:

- Ganciclovir (DHPG).

- Excluded within 1 month of study entry:

- ddI and any other antiretroviral drug or investigational anti-HIV agent except for zidovudine (AZT).

Interferons.

- Immunomodulating drugs.

- Cytotoxic agents not specifically allowed.

- Neurotoxic drugs.

Excluded within 3 months of study entry:

- Ribavirin.

Prior Treatment:

Excluded within 14 days of study randomization:

- Blood transfusion.

Active alcohol or drug abuse that is sufficient, in investigator's opinion, to prevent adequate compliance with study therapy.

Study Design

Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Zidovudine

Didanosine


Locations

Country Name City State
Puerto Rico San Juan Veterans Administration Med Ctr San Juan
United States Beth Israel Deaconess - West Campus Boston Massachusetts
United States Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr Boston Massachusetts
United States Boston Med Ctr Boston Massachusetts
United States Harvard (Massachusetts Gen Hosp) Boston Massachusetts
United States Bronx Municipal Hosp Ctr/Jacobi Med Ctr Bronx New York
United States Bronx Veterans Administration / Mount Sinai Hosp Bronx New York
United States Jack Weiler Hosp / Bronx Municipal Hosp Bronx New York
United States Montefiore Med Ctr / Bronx Municipal Hosp Bronx New York
United States SUNY / Erie County Med Ctr at Buffalo Buffalo New York
United States Univ of North Carolina Chapel Hill North Carolina
United States Northwestern Univ Med School Chicago Illinois
United States Rush Presbyterian - Saint Luke's Med Ctr Chicago Illinois
United States Holmes Hosp / Univ of Cincinnati Med Ctr Cincinnati Ohio
United States Univ Hosp of Cleveland / Case Western Reserve Univ Cleveland Ohio
United States Ohio State Univ Hosp Clinic Columbus Ohio
United States Mountain States Regional Hemophilia Ctr / Univ of Colorado Denver Colorado
United States Univ of Colorado Health Sciences Ctr Denver Colorado
United States Duke Univ Med Ctr Durham North Carolina
United States City Hosp Ctr at Elmhurst / Mount Sinai Hosp Elmhurst New York
United States G E Morey Jr Fort Lauderdale Florida
United States Dr Stephen L Green Hampton Virginia
United States Milton S Hershey Med Ctr Hershey Pennsylvania
United States Edward Hines Veterans Administration Hosp Hines Illinois
United States Hermann Hosp / Univ Texas Health Science Ctr Houston Texas
United States Indiana Univ Hosp Indianapolis Indiana
United States Univ of Tennessee / E Tennessee Comprehensive Hemophilia Ctr Knoxville Tennessee
United States Cedars Sinai / UCLA Med Ctr Los Angeles California
United States Children's Hosp of Los Angeles/UCLA Med Ctr Los Angeles California
United States Harbor - UCLA Med Ctr / UCLA School of Medicine Los Angeles California
United States Los Angeles County - USC Med Ctr Los Angeles California
United States UCLA CARE Ctr Los Angeles California
United States Univ of Miami School of Medicine Miami Florida
United States Dr Brian Buggy Milwaukee Wisconsin
United States Great Lakes Hemophilia Foundation Milwaukee Wisconsin
United States Milwaukee County Med Complex Milwaukee Wisconsin
United States Univ of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota
United States Louisiana Comprehensive Hemophilia Care Ctr New Orleans Louisiana
United States Louisiana State Univ Med Ctr / Tulane Med School New Orleans Louisiana
United States Tulane Univ School of Medicine New Orleans Louisiana
United States Bellevue Hosp / New York Univ Med Ctr New York New York
United States Beth Israel Med Ctr / Peter Krueger Clinic New York New York
United States Cornell Univ Med Ctr New York New York
United States Mem Sloan - Kettering Cancer Ctr New York New York
United States Mount Sinai Hemophilia Ctr / Mount Sinai Med Ctr New York New York
United States Mount Sinai Med Ctr New York New York
United States Saint Luke's - Roosevelt Hosp Ctr New York New York
United States Nebraska Regional Hemophilia Ctr Omaha Nebraska
United States Palo Alto Veterans Adm Med Ctr / Stanford Univ Palo Alto California
United States Univ of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania
United States Hemophilia Ctr of Western PA / Univ of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Univ of Pittsburgh Med School Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
United States Univ of Rochester Medical Center Rochester New York
United States Univ of California / San Diego Treatment Ctr San Diego California
United States San Francisco AIDS Clinic / San Francisco Gen Hosp San Francisco California
United States Stanford at Kaiser / Kaiser Permanente Med Ctr San Francisco California
United States Univ of Washington Seattle Washington
United States Baystate Med Ctr of Springfield Springfield Massachusetts
United States Stanford Univ School of Medicine Stanford California
United States SUNY - Stony Brook Stony Brook New York
United States Olive View Med Ctr Sylmar California
United States Sepulveda Veterans Adm Med Ctr / Olive View Med Ctr Sylmar California
United States SUNY / State Univ of New York Syracuse New York
United States Med College of Ohio Toledo Ohio
United States Harbor UCLA Med Ctr Torrance California
United States George Washington Univ Med Ctr Washington District of Columbia
United States Julio Arroyo West Columbia South Carolina
United States Univ of Kansas School of Medicine Wichita Kansas
United States Bowman Gray School of Medicine / Wake Forest Univ Winston-Salem North Carolina
United States Med Ctr of Central Massachusetts Worcester Massachusetts
United States Univ of Massachusetts Med Ctr Worcester Massachusetts

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Bristol-Myers Squibb

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

United States,  Puerto Rico, 

References & Publications (10)

Bozzette SA, Hays RD, Berry SH, Kanouse DE. A Perceived Health Index for use in persons with advanced HIV disease: derivation, reliability, and validity. Med Care. 1994 Jul;32(7):716-31. — View Citation

Coombs RW, Welles SL, Hooper C, Reichelderfer PS, D'Aquila RT, Japour AJ, Johnson VA, Kuritzkes DR, Richman DD, Kwok S, Todd J, Jackson JB, DeGruttola V, Crumpacker CS, Kahn J. Association of plasma human immunodeficiency virus type 1 RNA level with risk of clinical progression in patients with advanced infection. AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) 116B/117 Study Team. ACTG Virology Committee Resistance and HIV-1 RNA Working Groups. J Infect Dis. 1996 Oct;174(4):704-12. — View Citation

Fiscus SA, Heggem-Snow A, Troiani L, Wallmark E, Folds JD, Sheff B, van der Horst CM. Transient high titers of HIV-1 in plasma and progression of disease. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Hum Retrovirol. 1995 May 1;9(1):51-7. — View Citation

Kahn JO, Lagakos SW, Richman DD, Cross A, Pettinelli C, Liou SH, Brown M, Volberding PA, Crumpacker CS, Beall G, et al. A controlled trial comparing continued zidovudine with didanosine in human immunodeficiency virus infection. The NIAID AIDS Clinical Trials Group. N Engl J Med. 1992 Aug 27;327(9):581-7. — View Citation

Kozal M, Winters M, Shafer R, Kroodsma K, Katzenstein D, Merigan T. Behavior of codon 74 and 215 pol gene mutations in 62 AZT experienced patients on ddI monotherapy. Natl Conf Hum Retroviruses Relat Infect (1st). 1993 Dec 12-16;55

Kozal MJ, Kroodsma K, Winters MA, Shafer RW, Efron B, Katzenstein DA, Merigan TC. Didanosine resistance in HIV-infected patients switched from zidovudine to didanosine monotherapy. Ann Intern Med. 1994 Aug 15;121(4):263-8. — View Citation

Richardson D, Liou SH, Kahn JO. Uric acid and didanosine compliance in AIDS clinical trials: an analysis of AIDS Clinical Trials Group protocols 116A and 116B/117. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 1993 Nov;6(11):1212-23. — View Citation

Richman DD. Clinical significance of drug resistance in human immunodeficiency virus. Clin Infect Dis. 1995 Oct;21 Suppl 2:S166-9. Review. — View Citation

Schooley RT. Correlation between viral load measurements and outcome in clinical trials of antiviral drugs. AIDS. 1995 Dec;9 Suppl 2:S15-S19. Review. — View Citation

Smith MS, Koerber KL, Pagano JS. Long-term persistence of zidovudine resistance mutations in plasma isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 of dideoxyinosine-treated patients removed from zidovudine therapy. J Infect Dis. 1994 Jan;169(1):184-8. — View Citation

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