HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Different Integrase Inhibitor Based Regimen on Markers of Inflammation and Immune Activation Among HIV naïve Patient During the First Year of Effective First-line Combination
Low viral replication persistence and immune activation remain important therapeutic challenge in the new HAART era. They are associated with more rapid disease progression, increased risk of mortality and non-AIDS defining events. Soluble biomarkers are a convenient way of assessing immune activation and inflammation in HIV-infected patients receiving effective treatment. There are limited data describing the different effects of currently recommended antiretroviral regimens on immune activation and inflammation during HIV infection. Several studies have shown that raltegravir (the first approved drug from integrase inhibitor class) seems to have more impact on decreasing systemic inflammation compared with other drug classes. Integrase inhibitors may decrease inflammation and immune activation more than other antiretroviral drugs, because they are more lipid friendly and may concentrate better in enterocytes. The aim of this observational study is to compare the impact of different integrase inhibitor based regimen on changes in markers of inflammation (Il-2, IL-6, sTNFR-1, sCD14, sCD163, sICAM, hsRCP , sVCAM, LPS, D-dimer) during the first year of effective first-line combination. This is a 48-week observational retrospective study, to compare the change in infiammatory markers between naïve patients who start INI based regimen. Participants will be recruited from the HIV outpatient clinic. The study compare the impact of commonly used first-line antiretroviral drugs on soluble markers of inflammation and immune activation. The study is conducted on treatment-naive HIV-infected patients who experience a rapid and persistent virological response and that do not switch their initial regimen for at least 1 years. The analyses will be adjusted for baseline characteristics that might influence the choice of cART regimen or affect biomarker levels, such as age, smoking status, CD4 cell count, plasma HIV-1 viral load. Investigators enroll patients with a rapid and persistent virological response and that do not experience any blips. Cryopreserved plasma sample are obtained at baseline and at month 6 and 12 after treatment starting. Two NRTI backbone combinations (TDF/FTC vs ABC/3TC) and three third agents (RAL vs ELV vs DTG) will be compared in a factorial design. The results will be expressed as the estimated percentage difference between the mean fold changes observed with a given drug, using TDF/FTC and RAL as the reference groups for the comparison.
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) controls HIV-1 plasma
viral load in most patients, leading to a reduction in morbidity and mortality [Egger M, BMJ
1997; Detels R, JAMA 1998].
Despite efficient treatment persistent low-level viral replication and immune activation
remain an important therapeutic challenge. Immune activation is associated with more rapid
disease progression and with less efficient CD4+ cell recovery during cART [Hunt PW, J Infect
Dis 2003; Lederman MM, J Infect Dis 2011], while plasma biomarkers of inflammation have been
linked to a risk of mortality and non-AIDS-defining events such as cardiovascular disease and
non-AIDS-defining cancers [Kuller LH, PLoS Med. 2008; Ipp H, Clin Chim Acta. 2013].
A potential link between HIV-associated inflammation and disease progression and mortality was
shown for the first time in a randomized clinical trial of continuous versus intermittent
antiretroviral therapy (the Strategies for Management of Antiretroviral Therapy study - SMART
study) [Neuhaus J, J Infect Dis 2010]. In this study HIV-infected persons were randomized to
continuous antiretroviral therapy (ART) or CD4- T cell count- driven ART. Subjects randomized
to the second arm had a higher risk of morbidity and mortality. ART interruption resulted in
a rapid increase in inflammation- and coagulation-associated biomarkers that were associated
with increased risks of death, AIDS, and cardiovascular disease (CVD).
Further studies have confirmed that HIV-infected individuals have elevated levels of
inflammatory and cellular activation markers and suppression of viral replication by ART
decreases, but does not normalize those markers [Regidor DL, AIDS 2011; Widney DP, J
Interferon Cytokine Res 2005; Kaplan RC, J Acquir Immune Deficiency Syndr 2012].
Soluble biomarkers are a convenient way of assessing immune activation and inflammation in
HIV-infected patients receiving cART. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a biomarker of inflammation and
was found to be associated with all-cause mortality and cardiovascular diseases in the SMART
study [Neuhaus J, J Infect Dis 2010]. Interferon-γ-inducible protein-10 (IP-10) and monokine
induced by interferon-γ (MIG) are two chemokines produced by different cells and target
lymphocytes, particularly activated T cells. Elevated plasma IP-10 levels during the primary
phase of HIV-1 infection were predictive of earlier decline in the CD4 cell count in a recent
study [Liovat AS, PLOS One 2012; Jiao Y, Viral Immunology 2012; N. Noel, IAS 2013]. Soluble
CD14 (sCD14) is a marker of monocyte activation that binds to lipopolysaccharides in plasma.
Plasma levels of sCD14 are an independent predictor of mortality among HIV-infected patients
[D Sandler et al , JID 2011; E Krastinova, J Infect Dis. 2015] .
There are limited data describing the differential effects of currently recommended
antiretroviral regimens on immune activation and inflammation during HIV infection. As long as
viral suppression remains the goal of HIV treatment, choosing ART with the least long -term
toxicity and highest benefit is of great priority in the management of this chronic illness.
Understanding how different ART regimens reduce chronic immune activation and inflammation in
treated HIV-infected patients is an ongoing interesting research.
Several studies have shown that raltegravir (the first approved drug from integrase inhibitor
class) seems to have more impact on decreasing systemic inflammation compared with drugs from
protease inhibitor or non-nucleside transcriptase inhibitor classes [Asmuth DM, AIDS 2012;
Massanella M, AIDS 2012; Asmuth DM, AIDS 2014], both in naïve or treated-virologically
suppresed patients [Gupta SK, J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2013; Lake JE, HIV Medicine 2014].
It is plausible that drugs from integrase inhibitor class may decrease inflammation and
immune activation more than other antiretroviral classes, because they are more lipid
friendly and may concentrate better in enterocytes [ Martinez E, AIDS 2010] [Patterson KB,
AIDS 2013].
The aim of this observational study is to compare the impact of different INI based regimen
on changes in markers of inflammation (Il-2, IL-6, sTNFR-1, sCD14, sCD163, sICAM, hsRCP ,
sVCAM, LPS, D-dimer) during the first year of effective first-line combination.
OBJECTIVES The primary objective is to evaluate the changes in markers of inflammation (Il-2,
IL-6, sTNFR-1, sCD14, sCD163, sICAM, hsRCP , sVCAM, LPS, D-dimer) in patients who receive
first line INI-based therapy.
METHODS This is a 48-week observational retrospective study, to compare the change in
infiammatory markers between naïve patients who start INI based regimen. Participants will be
recruited from the HIV outpatient clinic.
STUDY DESIGN The study will compare the impact of commonly used first-line antiretroviral
drugs on soluble markers of inflammation and immune activation. In order to avoid the
influence of previous ARV exposure, active viral replication and treatment switches, the
analysis is limited to a homogenous group of treatment-naive HIV-infected patients who
experience a rapid and persistent virological response and remain on their initial regimen
for 1 years. The evaluation of biomarkers of inflammation is not a part of rourtine analysis,
so investigators will enrolled patients who have plasma samples stored before ART initiation,
6 month and 1 year later.
The analyses will be adjusted for baseline characteristics that might influence the choice of
cART regimen or affect biomarker levels, such as age, smoking status, CD4 cell count, plasma
HIV-1 viral load. Patients who had a rapid and persistent virological response (defined by a
plasma HIV-1 viral load (VL) below 400 copies/mL at 6 months and below 50 copies/mL at 12
months), with no values above 1000 copies/ml between month 6 and month 12 are enrolled in
this study, in order to control potential causes of inflammation/activation due to persistent
plasma viral replication Inclusion criteria
1) Naïve patients having documented HIV-1 infection, of age 18 years and older Exclusion
criteria
1. Patients with diagnosed CVD, diabetes, uncontrolled hypertension (screening systolic
blood pressure >160 mm Hg or diastolic pressure >90 mm Hg),
2. other systemic inflammatory disease (hepatitis B or C coinfection was allowed)
3. estimated creatinine clearance <70 mL/min;
4. HIV-1 RNA level of <1000 copies/mL,
5. prior ART use
6. estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of <70 mL/min by the Cockcroft-Gault
equation
7. liver transaminase levels <5 times the upper limit of normal
8. absolute neutrophil count of <1000 neutrophils/mm3
9. platelet count of ≥50 000 platelets/mm3,
10. hemoglobin level of ≥8.5 g/dL,
11. use of lipid-lowering drugs
12. life expectancy of ≥1 year from the time of enrollment
13. AIDS-defining conditions diagnosed within 30 days
14. active infection or malignancy
15. current alcohol or substance use judged to potentially interfere with study compliance
Markers of Inflammation and Immune Activation Cryopreserved plasma sample were obtained
at baseline (prior to ART initiation) and at month 6 and 12 after treatment starting
from 30 patients participating at MASTER (Management of Standardized Evaluation of
Retroviral HIV Infection) group, an ongoing prospective multicentre cohort that includes
the major Italian clinical centres involved in HIV infection care.
Thawed samples will stained for this circulating inflammatory markers [high sensitivity
C-reactive protein (hsCRP), serum interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-2 (IL-2), soluble tumor
necrosis factor-[alpha] receptors I and II (sTNFRI and sTNFRII), endothelial markers (soluble
vascular cell adhesion molecule-1,), markers of monocyte/macrophage activation [soluble CD14
(sCD14), soluble CD163 (sCD163)], D-dimer.
Statistical analysis The aim of this exploratory study is to evaluate the effect of a new
integrase inhibitor on serum level of inflammatory markers.
Two NRTI backbone combinations (TDF/FTC vs ABC/3TC) and three third agents (RAL vs ELV vs
DTG) will be compared in a factorial design. Baseline characteristics will be compared
between treatment groups by using the Wilcoxon and chi-squared tests in order to identify
variables associated with the choice of treatment. Because the marker values isn't normally
distributed, they will be log e-transformed for analysis. For each marker, changes between
D0, M6 and M12 (mean fold change) will be expressed as the geometric mean of their ratio
after log-e transformation. A paired one-sample t test will be used to identify significant
differences in the overall changes in each marker. Linear regression models will be used to
investigate the impact of the different NRTI backbones and the different third agents on the
biomarker changes. The results will be expressed as the estimated percentage difference
between the mean fold changes observed with a given drug, using TDF/FTC and RAL as the
reference groups for the comparison. Relationships between baseline covariables and changes
in each biomarker will be examined in univariable linear regression models. These covariables
will be sex, age, body mass index, smoking status, prior AIDS-defining events, and the
pre-ART CD4 cell count and viral load. Baseline covariables associated with changes in at
least one biomarker (p < 0.10) and viral blips above 50 copies/ml between M6 and M12 will be
retained in all multivariable linear regression models in order to control for factors that
might have influenced the choice of cART regimen or affected biomarker levels. Age and
smoking status will be included in the multivariable model since these variables are known to
influence marker levels. Interaction terms between the NRTI backbone and the third agent will
be tested for each marker. Sensitivity analyses will conduct. Statistical analyses will run
on STATA 12 software, and p values <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
Ethics This study will be conducted in accordance with the ethical principles that have their
origin in the Declaration of Helsinki and will be consistent with Good Clinical Practice
(GCP) and applicable regulatory requirements.
The study will be conducted in compliance with the protocol. The protocol and any amendments
and the patient informed consent will receive Ethics Committee (EC) approval/favourable
opinion prior to initiation of the study.
Freely given written informed consent must be obtained from every patient or their legally
acceptable representative prior to clinical trial participation, including informed consent
for any screening procedures conducted to establish patient eligibility for the trial.
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