HIV Infections Clinical Trial
— HEPCPROfficial title:
A Non-Randomized, Open Label, Study to Assess Hepatitis C Viral Kinetics in Predicting the Clinical Response in Patients With Hepatitis C Infection Coinfected With HIV-1 Treated With Peginterferon Alpha-2b and Ribavirin
This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of combination therapy with
peginterferon alfa-2b and ribavirin for treating hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in
HIV-infected patients. In studies of patients with hepatitis C alone, interferon alfa-2b
plus ribavirin treatment eradicated the HCV in almost half the patients. Peginterferon
alfa-2b is a compound that results from attaching a polyethylene glycol molecule to
interferon alfa-2b. This compound stays in the blood longer than unmodified interferon
alfa-2b, causing a higher blood concentration and thus maintaining activity against the
hepatitis C virus.
HIV-infected patients 21 years of age and older with chronic hepatitis C infection and a
viral load greater than 2000 copies/mL may be eligible for this 2 1/2-year study. Candidates
will be screened with blood and urine tests and possibly a liver biopsy, if a recent one is
not available. The liver biopsy is done to determine the severity of liver disease. For this
test, patients are admitted to the NIH Clinical Center for 1 to 2 days. A sedative is
injected into an arm vein, the skin in the area over the biopsy site is numbed with a local
anesthetic, and a needle is inserted rapidly into and out of the liver to obtain a small
tissue sample. The patient remains in the hospital overnight for monitoring. A chest X-ray,
electrocardiogram (EKG) and liver ultrasound are also done. Within 4 weeks of the screening
tests, candidates who appear eligible for the study will have a physical examination,
medical history and repeat blood tests. Women who can become pregnant will have serial
pregnancy tests throughout the study.
Patients who meet the study criteria and decide to participate will begin treatment with
weekly injections under the skin of peginterferon alfa-2b and take ribavirin pills twice a
day by mouth. In addition, patients will continue to take all other medications prescribed
by their doctor. Clinic visits will be scheduled as follows:
- Days 1, 3, 5, 7, 10 and 21 - Blood will be drawn for safety tests and to measure blood
levels of HIV and HCV.
- Weeks 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, 36, 40, 44, 52, 56 and 64 - Blood and urine
tests will be done to determine the side effects of treatment and its effect on the HCV
infection.
- Week 48 or end of treatment - Treatment will stop after 48 weeks. At this time, or
earlier for those who do not complete the 48 weeks, patients will return to the clinic
for a routine test.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 36 |
| Est. completion date | April 2009 |
| Est. primary completion date | April 2009 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | Both |
| Age group | 18 Years and older |
| Eligibility |
- INCLUSION CRITERIA: Age greater than or equal to 18 years. Documentation of HIV-1 infection by any licensed ELISA test and confirmed by a Western Blot. Documentation of Hepatitis C infection by demonstration of a positive test for hepatitis C antibody. HCV RNA level greater than 2000 IU/ml by bDNA. Infected with HCV genotype 1. Histopathologic features consistent with chronic hepatitis C on liver biopsy at the time of enrollment. Patients with CD4 greater than 300 cells/mm(3). Ability to sign informed consent and willingness to comply with the study requirements and clinic policies. Serum creatinine less than 1.5 mg/dL. Serum phosphorus greater than or equal to 2.2 mg/dL (normal range NIH 2.3-4.3 mg/dL). Neutrophil count greater than or equal to 1000 cells/mm(3). Platelets greater than or equal to 75,000/mm(3). Hemoglobin greater than or equal to 8.0 mg/dL. ALT less than 7 times the NIH upper limit of normal. Serum lipase less than 1.5 times the NIH upper limit of normal. Not pregnant or breast-feeding. Pregnancy test must be negative within two weeks prior to dosing with study medications. If capable of pregnancy: use of effective contraception during study: effective contraception methods include abstinence, surgical sterilization of either partner, barrier methods such as diaphragm, condom, cap or sponge, or use of hormonal contraception with an anti-HIV regimen that will not alter metabolism of hormonal contraception. This is advised on the basis of using ribavirin, which may have a potential teratogenic effect in pregnant women. Need to have a primary doctor outside OP8 who will be taking care of the patients for their HIV infection and liver disease. Willing to designate a person for durable power of attorney on the NIH form for medical research and medical care purposes at the NIH Clinical Center. Ability to learn how to safely inject medication subcutaneously. EXCLUSION CRITERIA: PT-INR (in the absence of anti-cardiolipin antibody) prolonged by greater than 2 seconds. Organ transplant recipient. Elevated alpha-fetoprotein level (greater than 100 ng/mL). Coexisting neoplastic disease requiring cytotoxic therapy. Child Pugh's class B. Severe cardiac or pulmonary decompensation. Severe liver decompensation or advanced cirrhosis patients. Severe psychiatric disorder that would interfere with the adherence to protocol requirements. Preexisting autoimmune disorders including inflammatory bowel diseases, psoriasis, and optic neuritis. Preexisting uncontrolled seizure disorder. Severe retinopathy. Hemoglobinopathy Direct bilirubin more than or equal to 2 times ULN. No patients using long term systemic corticosteroids, immunosuppressives, or cytotoxic agents within 60 days of enrollment into the trial. Chronic viral hepatitis of any other etiology other than hepatitis C. Active systemic infections other than hepatitis C and HIV. Liver disease caused by reasons other than hepatitis C like HBV, HDV, Wilson's hemochromatosis, autoimmune hepatitis (ANA greater than 160) except history of drug-associated hepatitis with discontinuation of the causative agent. Hepatic mass suggestive of hepatocellular carcinoma. Current alcohol or substance abuse that potentially could interfere with patient compliance. Significant heart failure. Evidence of esophageal varices. Any systemic illness that will make it unlikely that the subject will be able to return to NIH for the required study visits. Evidence of gastrointestinal malabsorption or chronic nausea or vomiting. Male partners of pregnant women. Currently taking didanosine (ddl or Videx-EC or Videx) as part of antiretroviral regimen. |
Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics/Dynamics Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike | Bethesda | Maryland |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) |
United States,
Allison RD, Katsounas A, Koziol DE, Kleiner DE, Alter HJ, Lempicki RA, Wood B, Yang J, Fullmer B, Cortez KJ, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Association of interleukin-15-induced peripheral immune activation with hepatic stellate cell activation in persons coinfect — View Citation
Avidan NU, Goldstein D, Rozenberg L, McLaughlin M, Ferenci P, Masur H, Buti M, Fauci AS, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Hepatitis C viral kinetics during treatment with peg IFN-alpha-2b in HIV/HCV coinfected patients as a function of baseline CD4+ T-cell counts. J — View Citation
Burbelo PD, Kovacs JA, Ching KH, Issa AT, Iadarola MJ, Murphy AA, Schlaak JF, Masur H, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Proteome-wide anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) and anti-HIV antibody profiling for predicting and monitoring the response to HCV therapy in HIV-coinfe — View Citation
Chary A, Winters MA, Kottilil S, Murphy AA, Polis MA, Holodniy M. Impact of interferon-ribavirin treatment on hepatitis C virus (HCV) protease quasispecies diversity in HIV- and HCV-coinfected patients. J Infect Dis. 2010 Sep 15;202(6):889-93. doi: 10.108 — View Citation
Farel C, Suzman DL, McLaughlin M, Campbell C, Koratich C, Masur H, Metcalf JA, Robinson MR, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Serious ophthalmic pathology compromising vision in HCV/HIV co-infected patients treated with peginterferon alpha-2b and ribavirin. AIDS. 200 — View Citation
Lempicki RA, Polis MA, Yang J, McLaughlin M, Koratich C, Huang DW, Fullmer B, Wu L, Rehm CA, Masur H, Lane HC, Sherman KE, Fauci AS, Kottilil S. Gene expression profiles in hepatitis C virus (HCV) and HIV coinfection: class prediction analyses before trea — View Citation
Naggie S, Osinusi A, Katsounas A, Lempicki R, Herrmann E, Thompson AJ, Clark PJ, Patel K, Muir AJ, McHutchison JG, Schlaak JF, Trippler M, Shivakumar B, Masur H, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Dysregulation of innate immunity in hepatitis C virus genotype 1 IL28B- — View Citation
Neumann A, Polis M, Rozenberg L, Jackson J, Reitano K, McLaughlin M, Koratich C, Dewar R, Masur H, Haagmans B, Kottilil S. Differential antiviral effect of PEG-interferon-alpha-2b on HIV and HCV in the treatment of HIV/HCV co-infected patients. AIDS. 2007 — View Citation
Nussenblatt V, McLaughlin M, Rehm CA, Lempicki RA, Brann T, Yang J, Proschan M, Highbarger HC, Dewar RL, Imamichi T, Koratich C, Neumann AU, Masur H, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Immunodeficiency and intrinsic IFN resistance are associated with viral breakthroug — View Citation
Osinusi A, Naggie S, Poonia S, Trippler M, Hu Z, Funk E, Schlaak J, Fishbein D, Masur H, Polis M, Kottilil S. ITPA gene polymorphisms significantly affect hemoglobin decline and treatment outcomes in patients coinfected with HIV and HCV. J Med Virol. 2012 — View Citation
Pau AK, McLaughlin MM, Hu Z, Agyemang AF, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Predictors for hematopoietic growth factors use in HIV/HCV-coinfected patients treated with peginterferon alfa 2b and ribavirin. AIDS Patient Care STDS. 2006 Sep;20(9):612-9. — View Citation
Rozenberg L, Haagmans BL, Neumann AU, Chen G, McLaughlin M, Levy-Drummer RS, Masur H, Dewar RL, Ferenci P, Silva M, Viola MS, Polis MA, Kottilil S. Therapeutic response to peg-IFN-alpha-2b and ribavirin in HIV/HCV co-infected African-American and Caucasia — View Citation
Sidique N, Kohli A, Shivakumar B, Migueles S, Subramanian GM, Naggie S, Polis MA, Masur H, Kottilil S. HIV/HCV-coinfected natural viral suppressors have better virologic responses to PEG-IFN and ribavirin than ARV-treated HIV/HCV patients. J Acquir Immune — View Citation
Wu L, Kottilil S, Lempicki R, Yang J, McLaughlin M, Hu Z, Koratich C, Reitano KN, Rehm CA, Masur H, Wood B, Kleiner DE, Polis MA. Hepatic histologic response (HR) to combination therapy among HCV/HIV-coinfected individuals: interferon induces HR independe — View Citation
* Note: There are 14 references in all — Click here to view all references
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Participants With Viral Decline at Day 3 & 28 With Predictors of Post Treatment Response | HCV viral kinetics were used to predict rates of sustained virology response (SVR) in HIV/HCV connected subjects. Measure was determined by analyzing the population of participants with virologic decline of more than 1.0 log at day 3 combined with viral load of less than 5.0 log IU/ml at day 28 to predict sustained virology response |
Day 3 and Day 28 | No |
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