HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
Safeguard the Household: A Study of HIV Antiretroviral Therapy Treatment Strategies Appropriate for a Resource Poor Country
Providing effective anti-HIV therapy in developing countries is challenging. This study will evaluate new strategies for delivering anti-HIV medications to people in South Africa. These strategies include using specially trained nurses to administer therapy (rather than doctors), treating all HIV infected members of a household at the same time, and having community members observe patients taking their medications.
The benefit of antiretroviral therapy is well established but limited to wealthy nations. A
predefined, simple sequence of treatment regimens focused on extending the durability of
limited treatment options has the best potential to be implemented in resource poor
countries. South Africa has 15% of the world's HIV/AIDS patients and a limited number of
physicians to treat them (l per 1,600 and less than 5 infectious diseases specialists). HIV
patient care in the primary care setting must therefore be delivered by personnel other than
doctors. Further, treatment strategies should include entire households to ensure maximum
adherence and minimize sharing of drugs.
This study will have two parts. The first part will compare a first-line antiretroviral
therapy regimen administered and monitored by primary health care sisters (nurses) with the
same regimen administered by doctors. The second part of the study will determine if
community-based directly observed therapy (DOT) is significantly superior to continued
clinic-based treatment support for patients who have failed first-line therapy, as measured
by cumulative virology failure rate. The project will also evaluate the cost and economic
impact of a predetermined schedule of antiretroviral therapy; treatment outcomes in terms of
morbidity, opportunistic and endemic infections, and mortality; and factors contributing to
treatment failure, including toxicity, resistance, compliance, and treatment interruption.
In Part 1, households will be randomly assigned to receive first-line antiretroviral therapy
under the monitoring and care of either an HIV-trained medical doctor supported by adherence
counselors or an HIV-trained primary health care sister (nurse with training in diagnosis
and treatment prescription). Members of the household who are HIV infected will receive
stavudine, lamivudine, and efavirenz (nevirapine or nelfinavir may be used for special
populations).
Participants who fail first-line antiretroviral therapy in Part 1 of the study will be
entered into Part 2 of the study. Participants in Part 2 will receive zidovudine,
didanosine, and lopinavir/ritonavir. Participants will be randomly assigned to have their
treatment monitored through either a clinic-based treatment support group or through
community-based directly observed treatment (DOT). For the DOT arm, a community member will
observe therapy for at least one dose a day, five days a week, at the home or work of the
participant.
HIV infected children age 3 months to 16 years who live in a participating household will
also be included in the study. These children will receive first-line treatment with clinic
visits monitored by either the assigned sister (nurse) or doctor along with their
households. In Part 2, children will be provided with a second-line treatment regimen with
continued daily monitoring of doses in the household.
The study will last 5 years.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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