HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Study Investigating Plasma Abacavir and Its Intracellular Anabolite Carbovir-triphosphate Pharmacokinetics in the Absence and in the Presence of Darunavir/Ritonavir or Raltegravir in HIV-infected Subjects.
The study is being conducted as we have found that many patients with Human Immunodeficiency
Disease (HIV) require a combination of different drugs to treat the HIV infection. Before
using different combination of drugs, it is important to do studies to see if the drugs will
affect the activity of one another.
The study aims to help us understand if darunavir/ritonavir or raltegravir have any effects
on levels of abacavir in the blood.
The purpose of the study is to assess the pharmacokinetics (how a drug is absorbed,
distributed and eliminated from your body) of abacavir in the absence and in the presence of
darunavir/ritonavir and raltegravir.
Since the co-administration of nucleoside analogues and protease inhibitors, and soon
integrase inhibitors, forms an integral part of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
and these combinations may result in unexpected drug interactions (as demonstrated by
interactions between protease inhibitors and TFV), it is therefore important to elucidate
the impact of ARV co-administration on drug levels.
The risk of ABC hypersensitivity (HSR) precludes the study of this agent in healthy
volunteers therefore this study will be performed in HIV-infected subjects. Clinical
efficacy of drugs is related to their plasma concentrations [Boffito, 2005] and it is
important to know whether ABC has any impact on the levels of therapeutic agents that may
impact on their clinical efficacy. Moreover, it is still unknown whether ABC exposure is
altered by the ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitors darunavir or by the new HIV drug
raltegravir. Raltegravir will be soon approved for the treatment of HIV in Europe and United
States.
Pharmacogenetics holds promise in HIV treatment because of the complexity and potential
toxicity of multi antiretroviral drug therapies that are prescribed for long periods. Thus
far, few candidate genes have been examined for a limited number of allelic variants, but a
number of confirmed associations have already emerged.
From a public health perspective, as antiretroviral medications become increasingly
available to racially and ethnically diverse populations worldwide, understanding the
genetic structures of each population may allow us to anticipate the impact of adverse
responses, even in groups that were not represented in drug registration trials.
The existing literature on pharmacogenetic determinants of antiretroviral drug exposure,
drug toxicity, as well as genetic markers associated with the rate of disease progression
underline the recent advances which occurred in the past few years.
However, it is expected that larger-scale comprehensive genome approaches will profoundly
change the landscape of knowledge in the future. Additional studies are needed to assess the
implications for long-term responses to antiretroviral agents.
For this reason we plan to collect a single blood sample from each participant in our
intensive pharmacokinetic studies, such as this one, in order to be able to investigate the
association between genetic polymorphisms in drug disposition genes (such as those encoding
for cytochrome P450 isoenzymes or transmembrane transporters) and drug exposure. A candidate
gene approach will be utilised to examine loci of interest. This procedure will provide
potentially important information on genetic influences on plasma drug concentrations and
give insight into how to improve the management of HIV-infected patients by individualising
therapy. These studies will not be powered for genetic associations but will enable us to
build a data base of genotype-phenotype. Prospective genetic studies would need to be
planned based on these preliminary data.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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