HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase II Study to Demonstrate That Therapy With Efavirenz (EFV) and Other Antiretroviral Drugs Can Be Interrupted Without Selecting for EFV-Resistant Virus, and Relation to Kinetics of Drug Elimination
The purpose of this study is to find out if anti-HIV drugs can be stopped without the virus
becoming resistant to the drugs. The study will also examine how fast anti-HIV drugs leave
the body.
Not all HIV-infected patients may require continuous and indefinite anti-HIV therapy. There
is evidence that stopping anti-HIV therapy will not make the virus resistant to efavirenz
(EFV), an anti-HIV drug that remains in the body longer than most treatment drugs. In
another study, patients were treated with EFV, zidovudine (ZDV), and lamivudine (3TC). The
patients' virus was controlled despite the fact that some patients missed medication
dosages. Many patients stop anti-HIV therapy because of negative effects. This study will
examine the body's ability to fight and control virus in patients who stop therapy.
The concept that all patients with HIV-1 infection require continuous and indefinite
antiretroviral therapy (ART) has been questioned. There are both theoretical reasons and
supporting empiric evidence that suggest that discontinuing ART should not select for
EFV-resistance. In Dupont Protocol 006, antiretroviral-naive patients were randomized to
receive EFV, ZDV, and 3TC. This regimen was associated with an excellent and sustained
virologic response. It is certain that many patients in this study were able to maintain
sustained suppression of HIV-1 RNA to below limits of detection despite missing occasional
doses of all medications. Since therapy with ZDV and 3TC alone is unlikely to maintain
virologic control, emergence of substantial high-level EFV resistance should have led to
virologic failure. The fact that there were relatively few virologic failures in that study
provides indirect but strong evidence that simultaneous discontinuation of EFV, ZDV, and 3TC
is unlikely to be associated with emergence of EFV resistance. Many individuals discontinue
antiretroviral therapy because of adverse effects. This study provides the opportunity to
determine whether the virologic response of patients who discontinue antiretroviral therapy
will be compromised.
Participants will discontinue their EFV. Other antiretroviral drugs in the patients'
regimens may be continued for up to three days after the last EFV dose. Patients will not
resume EFV or other antiretroviral agents for at least 28 days after stopping EFV, unless
the CD4 cell count declines to a level that indicates the need to resume therapy. Throughout
the study, patients will have blood drawn on specified days for plasma EFV assays,
intracellular NRTI-TP assays, and demonstration of EFV resistance. After patients have been
off their antiretrovirals for at least four weeks, they may choose to restart their ART,
start a new regimen, or discontinue their ART. Patients who restart their ART need to come
to the clinic seven days after restarting to have blood drawn. After plasma EFV assays have
been completed and HIV resistance has not been demonstrated, three patients will have a
clonal analysis performed.
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Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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