HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Determine Whether Induction Therapy Followed by Treatment Interruption is Superior to Induction Therapy Alone in the Treatment of Primary HIV Infection (PHI): The Structured Treatment Interruption (STI) Study
People recently infected with HIV who are treated with anti-HIV medications may develop
strong immune system responses to HIV and may be able to control the virus without
continuing to take these medications. The purpose of this study is to see if giving anti-HIV
medications to people soon after they have been infected with HIV can help them control HIV.
The study will also see if the immune system can control the amount of HIV virus in the
blood (viral load) even after a person has stopped taking the medications. The study will
evaluate three different schedules of stopping and starting anti-HIV medications to see
which schedule is best able to boost a patient's immune system to control HIV viral load.
Hypothesis: Combination therapy started in primary HIV infection, in conjunction with
structured treatment interruptions, will result in greater control of viremia off treatment
than induction therapy alone.
Initiation of treatment during acute HIV infection seems to result in greater suppression of
viral replication than noted during chronic infection and better recovery of certain CD4
subpopulations. However, it is difficult for patients treated during acute infection to
maintain long-term continuous antiretroviral (ARV) treatment because of difficulty adhering
to complicated medication regimens, drug-related toxicities, and cost of medications.
Acutely infected patients who have undergone early initiation of treatment followed by
structured treatment interruptions (STIs) appear to have lower off-treatment viral loads
than historical controls. This study will evaluate whether effective ARV treatment during
acute and early HIV infection followed by STI will result in lower viral setpoints than
would otherwise be expected.
This trial will have 2 steps and will last for a maximum of 104 weeks. Participants will
either enter Step 1 and continue on to Step 2 or enter Step 2 directly. During Step 1,
participants with acute or early HIV infection will be given 24 weeks of ARV therapy.
Participants may take any combination of FDA-approved ARV medications that they and their
doctors select. Participants will have study visits at study entry and Weeks 1, 4, 8, and
20. After 24 weeks on Step 1, participants may enroll in Step 2.
Participants in Step 1 and people with early or acute HIV infection who began ARV treatment
within 21 days of diagnosis and have had no more than 1 year of treatment may enroll in Step
2. During Step 2, participants will be randomly assigned to one of two study arms:
- Arm 1: Participants will continue taking ARV therapy for 16 weeks and then stop ARVs
for 64 weeks.
- Arm 2: Participants will stop ARVs for 4 weeks, take ARVs for 8 weeks, stop ARVs for 4
weeks, take ARVs for 8 weeks, and then stop ARVs for 56 weeks.
Participants in both study arms will restart ARVs regardless of STI duration if their viral
load is above 50,000 copies/ml, they progress to CDC category C disease, or their CD4 count
falls below 350 cells/mm3 or declines more than 50% from the last on-treatment CD4 level.
Step 2 will last 80 weeks. For the first year, participants will have study visits every 1
to 4 weeks, depending on whether they are taking ARVs. During the second year, participants
will have study visits every 8 weeks. Study visits will include a brief medical history,
blood and pregnancy tests, and voluntary behavioral questionnaires.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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