Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02369406
Other study ID # U01AI114235
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Phase 2/Phase 3
First received
Last updated
Start date May 4, 2015
Est. completion date June 30, 2029

Study information

Verified date November 2023
Source Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The overall objective of this study is to determine whether very early antiretroviral treatment (ART) initiation in HIV-infected infants limits the seeding of viral reservoirs and maintains immune responses, potentially allowing future periods off ART.


Description:

HIV-1 infection during adulthood leads to a stable, long-lasting viral reservoir in CD4 T cells that persists despite suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART), and is responsible for rapid viral rebound once treatment is stopped in most cases. In neonates, HIV-1 infection occurs at a time when the adaptive immune system is still in development, which may alter the establishment of a long-lasting viral reservoir and offer opportunities to reduce viral persistence through early antiretroviral treatment. Recently, scientific understanding of neonatal HIV infection has been challenged by the description of an infant who tested positive for HIV at birth, was treated with potent combination antiretroviral therapy (ART) within the first 30 hours of life, and achieved long-term remission of HIV infection when ART was stopped approximately 18 months later. Unfortunately, after 2 years off ART, rebound viremia occurred in this child, yet this case raises the provocative question of whether ART initiated within the first days of life for an antepartum infection, or in the first days/weeks of life for a peripartum infection, can prevent the seeding of a long-lasting reservoir of HIV infected cells in some infants (and therefore lead to long periods of HIV remission off ART).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 67
Est. completion date June 30, 2029
Est. primary completion date November 6, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 0 Days to 3 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria (antepartum infection cohort): 1. Mother/guardian =18 years of age and able to provide informed consent 2. Gestational age at birth =35 weeks 3. Birth weight =2000 grams 4. Age is less than 7 days* 5. HIV-infection identified by testing conducted within 96 hours after birth NOTE: HIV-infection is defined as DNA PCR positive on at least one specimen, with confirmation specimen either positive or pending** 6. Ability to initiate ART within 7 days after birth 7. Eligible for ART through the Botswana government program 8. Ability to be followed in BHP clinic for up to 240 weeks from enrollment# 9. Blood samples collected and submitted for real-time safety lab evaluations; results may be pending at the time of entry. - At least half of infants in the antepartum cohort must be < 3 days at enrollment, including 3 of the first 6 infants enrolled. - Participants will be offered extended follow-up for up to 576 weeks. However, willingness to participate in optional extended follow-up is not an inclusion criterion. Inclusion Criteria (peripartum infection cohort): 1. Mother/guardian =18 years of age and able to provide informed consent 2. Age is greater than 4 days and less than 57 days 3. HIV-negative within 96 hours after birth NOTE: HIV-negative is defined as HIV-negative by DNA PCR on a single specimen or HIV-negative on 2 separate confirmatory specimens following a re-test of an HIV-positive sample 4. HIV-positive between 96 hours and 56 days after birth NOTE: DNA PCR positive on at least one specimen with confirmation specimen either positive or pending repeat draw or result** 5. Ability to initiate ART at enrollment 6. Eligible for ART through the Botswana government program 7. Ability to be followed in BHP clinic for ART for up to 240 weeks after enrollment# 8. Blood samples collected and submitted for real-time safety lab evaluations (results may be pending at the time of entry). - An enrolled infant later determined to be HIV uninfected by confirmatory testing will end participation in the study and this enrollment will not be counted against the total number of enrollments planned. - Participants will be offered extended follow-up for up to 576 weeks. However, willingness to participate in optional extended follow-up is not an inclusion criterion. Inclusion Criteria (control group): 1. Mother/guardian =18 years of age and able to provide informed consent 2. 24-36 months of age 3. HIV-infection documented within 365 days after birth 4. ART initiated within the following timeframe based on timing of HIV-infection diagnosis > 30-365 days after birth if HIV-infection diagnosed within 96 hours after birth OR > 57-365 days after birth if infant was HIV-negative based on testing performed within 96 hours after birth (or if unknown HIV status < 96 hours from birth) and then found to be HIV-positive based on testing performed between 96 hours and 365 days after birth. 5. After 6 months of ART, no more than one HIV RNA measurement > 400 copies/mL Exclusion Criteria (for antepartum and peripartum infection cohort): 1. Hospitalization for life-threatening medical illness 2. Medical condition making it unlikely that the infant will survive to 96 weeks 3. If lab values are available prior to enrollment, the following Division of AIDS 2014 graded results, from samples collected within 7 days prior to entry without subsequent testing, will exclude an infant: - Grade =3 ALT - Grade =3 AST - Grade =4 hemoglobin Note: Baseline lab values may not be available at the time of ART start. However, as soon as these values are available (occasionally within <24 hours), they will be used to make rapid treatment decisions. Neonates with baseline Grade 4 hemoglobin will be called immediately to have ZDV discontinued if the value is confirmed. Neonates with baseline Grade 3 or 4 ALT or AST will be called immediately to stop either NVP or LPV/r if the value is confirmed. Neonates who remain on ART may remain on study. Neonates who discontinue all ART for pre-ART laboratory abnormalities will not be counted against total enrollments. Exclusion Criteria (control group): 1) < 85% reported adherence to prescribed doses or interruption of ART for more than 7 consecutive days since its initiation.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Nevirapine

Kaletra

Lamivudine

Zidovudine


Locations

Country Name City State
Botswana Botswana Harvard HIV/AIDS Institute Partnership Gaborone

Sponsors (4)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Brigham and Women's Hospital, Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard, University of California, San Diego

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Botswana, 

References & Publications (11)

Ajibola G, Garcia-Broncano P, Maswabi K, Bennett K, Hughes MD, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Jean-Philippe P, Sakoi M, Batlang O, Lockman S, Makhema J, Kuritzkes DR, Lichterfeld M, Shapiro RL. Viral Reservoir in Early-Treated Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected C — View Citation

Ajibola G, Maswabi K, Hughes MD, Bennett K, Pretorius-Holme M, Capparelli EV, Jean-Philippe P, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Batlang O, Sakoi M, Ricci L, Lockman S, Makhema J, Kuritzkes DR, Lichterfeld M, Shapiro RL. Brief Report: Long-Term Clinical, Immunologic, a — View Citation

Ajibola G, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Moseki S, Jack D, Sakoi M, Batlang O, Maswabi K, Bennett K, Hughes MD, Lockman S, Makhema JM, Lichterfeld M, Kuritzkes DR, Shapiro RL. HIV diagnostic algorithm requires confirmatory testing for initial indeterminate or posit — View Citation

Davey S, Ajibola G, Maswabi K, Sakoi M, Bennett K, Hughes MD, Isaacson A, Diseko M, Zash R, Batlang O, Moyo S, Lockman S, Lichterfeld M, Kuritzkes DR, Makhema J, Shapiro R. Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission With In Utero Dolutegravir vs. Efavirenz in Botsw — View Citation

Garcia-Broncano P, Maddali S, Einkauf KB, Jiang C, Gao C, Chevalier J, Chowdhury FZ, Maswabi K, Ajibola G, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Ncube T, Makhema J, Jean-Philippe P, Yu XG, Powis KM, Lockman S, Kuritzkes DR, Shapiro R, Lichterfeld M. Early antiretroviral th — View Citation

Hartana CA, Broncano PG, Maswabi K, Ajibola G, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Maphorisa C, Makhema J, Powis KM, Lockman S, Burbelo PD, Gao C, Yu XG, Kuritzkes DR, Shapiro R, Lichterfeld M. Immune Modulation of HIV-1 Reservoir Size in Early-Treated Neonates. J Infect — View Citation

Hartana CA, Garcia-Broncano P, Rassadkina Y, Lian X, Jiang C, Einkauf KB, Maswabi K, Ajibola G, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Maphorisa C, Makhema J, Yuki Y, Martin M, Bennett K, Jean-Philippe P, Viard M, Hughes MD, Powis KM, Carrington M, Lockman S, Gao C, Yu XG, — View Citation

Ibrahim M, Maswabi K, Ajibola G, Moyo S, Hughes MD, Batlang O, Sakoi M, Auletta-Young C, Vaughan L, Lockman S, Jean-Philippe P, Yu X, Lichterfeld M, Kuritzkes DR, Makhema J, Shapiro RL. Targeted HIV testing at birth supported by low and predictable mother — View Citation

Ibrahim M, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Mupfumi L, Gaseitsiwe S, Maswabi K, Ajibola G, Gelman R, Batlang O, Sakoi M, Auletta-Young C, Makhema J, Lockman S, Shapiro RL. Brief Report: High Sensitivity and Specificity of the Cepheid Xpert HIV-1 Qualitative Point-of-C — View Citation

Maswabi K, Ajibola G, Bennett K, Capparelli EV, Jean-Philippe P, Moyo S, Mohammed T, Batlang O, Sakoi M, Lockman S, Makhema J, Lichterfeld M, Kuritzkes DR, Hughes MD, Shapiro RL. Safety and Efficacy of Starting Antiretroviral Therapy in the First Week of — View Citation

Moraka NO, Garcia-Broncano P, Hu Z, Ajibola G, Bareng OT, Pretorius-Holme M, Maswabi K, Maphorisa C, Mohammed T, Gaseitsiwe S, VanZyl GU, Kuritzkes DR, Lichterfeld M, Moyo S, Shapiro RL. Patterns of pretreatment drug resistance mutations of very early dia — View Citation

* Note: There are 11 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary To determine the proportion of infants who have treatment-limiting adverse events within the first 14 days of treatment 14 days
Primary To determine the proportion of infants who fail to achieve at least a 1.5 log10 copies/mL reduction in HIV-1 RNA by the 14th day of treatment 14 days
Primary To determine the proportion of infants in the antepartum cohort with trough drug concentrations below defined therapeutic ranges at 7 and 14 days of treatment (trough concentrations will be evaluated for NVP, ZDV, 3TC) 14 days
Primary To evaluate virologic and immunologic outcomes of very early ART in infancy Virologic outcomes after early ART: We will evaluate how the timing of HIV infection and the timing of ART initiation affect the size and composition of the viral reservoir over time.
Immunologic outcomes after early ART: We will evaluate how immune activation and immune activity against HIV-1 contribute to the size and composition of the HIV-1 reservoir over time in infants treated early with suppressive ART.
Control Group Comparisons. We will evaluate virologic and immunologic outcomes at a single time point in children for whom ART initiation was later than in the prospective cohorts, and compared with immunologic testing of stored specimens from HIV exposed uninfected and HIV unexposed children.
84-96 weeks
Secondary Number of participants with HIV-1 RNA levels <40 copies/mL up to 576 weeks
Secondary Number of participants with reservoir HIV-1 DNA (in copies/million peripheral blood mononuclear cells, PBMCs) below the level of detection for total virus Threshold of detection is expected to be approximately 5 copies/million PBMCs, but varies by sample volume available. up to 576 weeks
Secondary Median CD4 cell count (cells/mm3) and 95% confidence intervals among participants up to 576 weeks
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06162897 - Case Management Dyad N/A
Completed NCT03999411 - Smartphone Intervention for Smoking Cessation and Improving Adherence to Treatment Among HIV Patients Phase 4
Completed NCT02528773 - Efficacy of ART to Interrupt HIV Transmission Networks
Recruiting NCT05454839 - Preferences for Services in a Patient's First Six Months on Antiretroviral Therapy for HIV in South Africa
Recruiting NCT05322629 - Stepped Care to Optimize PrEP Effectiveness in Pregnant and Postpartum Women N/A
Completed NCT02579135 - Reducing HIV Risk Among Adolescents: Evaluating Project HEART N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01790373 - Evaluating a Youth-Focused Economic Empowerment Approach to HIV Treatment Adherence N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06044792 - The Influence of Primary HIV-1 Drug Resistance Mutations on Immune Reconstruction in PLWH
Completed NCT04039217 - Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) Persistence in Different Body Compartments in HIV Negative MSM Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT04519970 - Clinical Opportunities and Management to Exploit Biktarvy as Asynchronous Connection Key (COMEBACK) N/A
Completed NCT04124536 - Combination Partner HIV Testing Strategies for HIV-positive and HIV-negative Pregnant Women N/A
Recruiting NCT05599581 - Tu'Washindi RCT: Adolescent Girls in Kenya Taking Control of Their Health N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04588883 - Strengthening Families Living With HIV in Kenya N/A
Completed NCT02758093 - Speed of Processing Training in Adults With HIV N/A
Completed NCT02500446 - Dolutegravir Impact on Residual Replication Phase 4
Completed NCT03805451 - Life Steps for PrEP for Youth N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03902431 - Translating the ABCS Into HIV Care N/A
Completed NCT00729391 - Women-Focused HIV Prevention in the Western Cape Phase 2/Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05736588 - Elimisha HPV (Human Papillomavirus) N/A
Recruiting NCT03589040 - Darunavir and Rilpivirine Interactions With Etonogestrel Contraceptive Implant Phase 2