HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
WEUSKOP5522: Observational Drug Exposure Registry for Long-Term Follow-Up of Subjects Exposed to GSK2248761
| Verified date | July 2019 |
| Source | ViiV Healthcare |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Observational |
The World Health Organization has estimated that as many as 10% of the population worldwide
may at some point experience at least one seizure. The percentage with active epilepsy is
from 0.4% to 1%. From 40% to 65% of patients with HIV infection have been estimated to have
some neurological involvement; the percentage reaches as high as 70% to 80% when post-mortem
assessments are included. Estimates of the percentage of HIV-infected patients with seizure
occurrence have varied widely, with one review finding a range from 2% to 20%. The highest
percentage in this range was reported at a center that exclusively treated patients with
neurological involvement, in India where HIV clade C subtype is predominant. Query of another
neurology department's database determined that of the HIV-infected patients treated at the
center, all of whom were referred for neurological symptoms, 6.1% experienced seizures.
Underlying neurologic diseases in these patients included HIV-associated encephalopathy,
progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, and toxoplasmosis. In a Spanish population, 3% of
HIV-infected patients over a one-year study period were found to have new-onset seizures,
which were attributed to drug toxicity in 47%, intracranial lesions in 35%, and metabolic
derangements in 12%.
Drug-discontinuation studies, magnetic resonance imaging studies, and animal studies have
produced recent evidence that some antiretroviral therapies may have neurotoxic effects,
warranting further research. Individuals who are treated with highly active antiretroviral
therapy are at risk for immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS), in which immune
recovery triggers clinical deterioration as the newly invigorated immune system reacts to
pathogens that either represent ongoing opportunistic infection or were previously
successfully controlled. In a population initiating combination antiretroviral therapy
between 1999 and 2007, 0.9% developed neurological manifestations of IRIS. Seizures may occur
as part of a neurological IRIS syndrome, such as encephalitis and toxoplasmosis.
Two randomized, Phase 2b dose-finding studies were conducted in HIV-1 infected adults to
compare GSK2248761 100 mg and 200 mg given once daily as part of an antiretroviral treatment
regimen. One of the studies (SGN113399) was in subjects with prior exposure to antiretroviral
therapy where GSK2248761 100 mg and 200 mg once daily were compared to determine the best
dose in this population. A contemporary control arm receiving etravirine 200 mg twice daily
was also included, and all arms included a twice-daily background therapy consisting of
darunavir/ritonavir 600 mg/100 mg plus raltegravir 400 mg. The other study (SGN113404) was in
treatment-naïve subjects, comparing GSK2248761 100 mg and 200 mg once daily to determine the
best dose in this population. A contemporary control arm receiving efavirenz 600 mg once
daily was also included, and all arms were given background therapy selected by investigators
from either once-daily abacavir/lamivudine 600 mg/300 mg or tenofovir/emtricitabine 300
mg/200 mg. Of a planned total population in both studies of 300 subjects, 35 were enrolled
before the studies were terminated because of the occurrence of seizures in five subjects.
All of the subjects who experienced seizures were enrolled into SGN113399, four randomized to
receive 200 mg GSK2248761 and one randomized to receive 100 mg GSK2248761. There were no
seizures in the subjects receiving GSK2248761 in study SGN113404. At the time of study
termination, subjects had been enrolled and received GSK2248761 at 19 sites in four
countries: France, Romania, United States, and Germany. Although potential contributory
conditions have been identified in some cases, definitive causative factors for the seizure
occurrence have not been established.
The purpose of this study is to follow subjects who previously received GSK2248761 while
enrolled in the Phase 2b studies, which were halted due to unexpected seizures. The study
will collect data on all subjects and will be used to monitor for additional seizures as well
as collect additional clinical data on all subjects.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 19 |
| Est. completion date | April 30, 2013 |
| Est. primary completion date | April 30, 2013 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | N/A and older |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Subjects who were previously randomized in the Phase 2b studies SGN113399 or SGN113404 and received GSK2248761 Exclusion Criteria: - N/A |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| n/a | |||
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| ViiV Healthcare | GlaxoSmithKline |
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Number of Participants With Occurrence of Seizure | In the registry study from start to the end of follow-up, the number of participants who experienced seizure were reported. This was done to evaluate to test the time-efficiency and cost-efficiency for a long term, non-interventional study. | Up to 17 months | |
| Secondary | Number of Participants With Serious Adverse Event (SAE) and Adverse Event (AE) | An AE was any unfavorable and unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory finding), symptom, or disease (new or exacerbated) temporally associated with the use of a medicinal (investigational) product, whether or not considered related to the medicinal (investigational) product. For marketed medicinal products, this also includes failure to produce expected benefits (i.e. lack of efficacy), abuse or misuse. SAE was any experience that: resulted in death, was life-threatening, required in-patient hospitalization or prolongation of existing hospitalization, resulted in persistent or significant disability/incapacity, was a congenital anomaly/birth defect or was medically significant. | Upto 17 months |
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed |
NCT05454514 -
Automated Medication Platform With Video Observation and Facial Recognition to Improve Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy in Patients With HIV/AIDS
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03760458 -
The Pharmacokinetics, Safety, and Tolerability of Abacavir/Dolutegravir/Lamivudine Dispersible and Immediate Release Tablets in HIV-1-Infected Children Less Than 12 Years of Age
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
| Completed |
NCT03067285 -
A Phase IV, Open-label, Randomised, Pilot Clinical Trial Designed to Evaluate the Potential Neurotoxicity of Dolutegravir/Lamivudine/Abacavir in Neurosymptomatic HIV Patients and Its Reversibility After Switching to Elvitegravir/Cobicistat/Emtricitabine/Tenofovir Alafenamide. DREAM Study
|
Phase 4 | |
| Completed |
NCT03141918 -
Effect of Supplementation of Bioactive Compounds on the Energy Metabolism of People Living With HIV / AIDS
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04579146 -
Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) in Patients HIV-infected
|
||
| Completed |
NCT06212531 -
Papuan Indigenous Model of Male Circumcision
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT03256422 -
Antiretroviral Treatment Taken 4 Days Per Week Versus Continuous Therapy 7/7 Days Per Week in HIV-1 Infected Patients
|
Phase 3 | |
| Completed |
NCT03256435 -
Retention in PrEP Care for African American MSM in Mississippi
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT00517803 -
Micronutrient Supplemented Probiotic Yogurt for HIV/AIDS and Other Immunodeficiencies
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT03572335 -
Systems Biology of Diffusion Impairment in Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
|
||
| Completed |
NCT04165200 -
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation as a Therapeutic Strategy for Patients Infected With HIV
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT03854630 -
Hepatitis B Virus Vaccination in HIV-positive Patients and Individuals at High Risk for HIV Infection
|
Phase 4 | |
| Terminated |
NCT03275571 -
HIV, Computerized Depression Therapy & Cognition
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT02234882 -
Study on Pharmacokinetics
|
Phase 1 | |
| Completed |
NCT01618305 -
Evaluating the Response to Two Antiretroviral Medication Regimens in HIV-Infected Pregnant Women, Who Begin Antiretroviral Therapy Between 20 and 36 Weeks of Pregnancy, for the Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission
|
Phase 4 | |
| Recruiting |
NCT05043129 -
Safety and Immune Response of COVID-19 Vaccination in Patients With HIV Infection
|
||
| Not yet recruiting |
NCT05536466 -
The Influence of Having Bariatric Surgery on the Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Efficacy of the Novel Non-nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor Doravirine
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT04985760 -
Evaluation of Trimer 4571 Therapeutic Vaccination in Adults Living With HIV on Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy
|
Phase 1 | |
| Completed |
NCT05916989 -
Stimulant Use and Methylation in HIV
|
||
| Terminated |
NCT02116660 -
Evaluation of Renal Function, Efficacy, and Safety When Switching From Tenofovir/Emtricitabine Plus a Protease Inhibitor/Ritonavir, to a Combination of Raltegravir (MK-0518) Plus Nevirapine Plus Lamivudine in HIV-1 Participants With Suppressed Viremia and Impaired Renal Function (MK-0518-284)
|
Phase 2 |