HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
Preventing Tuberculosis-associated Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome in High-risk Patients: a Randomized Placebo-controlled Trial of Prednisone
Tuberculosis (TB) is the most common opportunistic infection amongst HIV-infected patients starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) in developing countries and thus the most frequent form of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS). Paradoxical TB-IRIS occurs in 8- 43% of patients starting ART while on TB treatment and results in morbidity, hospitalisation, consumes health care resources and TB-IRIS may be fatal. We have previously demonstrated in a clinical trial that prednisone reduces morbidity when used for treatment of paradoxical TB-IRIS. This trial is a double-blind placebo-controlled trial of prophylactic prednisone (40mg/day for 2 weeks followed by 20mg/day for 2 weeks, started on the same day as ART) in patients with TB who are identified as being at high risk for paradoxical TB-IRIS (starting ART within 30 days of initiating TB treatment and CD4 < 100/μL). The trial will enroll 240 participants, randomised 1:1 (prednisone:placebo). The primary endpoint is development of paradoxical TB-IRIS, defined using international consensus case definitions. Secondary endpoints include time to IRIS event, severity of IRIS, quality of life assessment, mortality and corticosteroids adverse events. The trial is powered to determine a reduction in TB-IRIS events.
Objective: To determine whether the addition of prednisone to the first 4 weeks of
antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces the risk of paradoxical TB-IRIS in HIV-infected patients
being treated for TB who are at high risk of developing TB-IRIS (CD4 <100 cells/μl and
starting ART within 30 days of TB treatment).
Design: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the incidence of
paradoxical TB-IRIS over the first 12 weeks of ART in participants who receive a 4 week
course of prednisone versus participants who receive a 4 week course of placebo.
Primary efficacy endpoint:
The development of paradoxical TB-IRIS within 12 weeks of starting ART (defined using the
International Network for the Study of HIV-associated IRIS (INSHI) consensus case
definition).
Secondary efficacy endpoints:
1. Time to IRIS event
2. Severity of IRIS events (defined by the following: need for hospitalisation for IRIS,
C-reactive protein, and neurological involvement)
3. Duration of TB-IRIS event (from onset of symptoms/signs to resolution of TB-IRIS
symptoms/signs)
4. Mortality attributed to TB and TB-IRIS
5. All-cause mortality
6. Composite endpoint of death, hospitalization, or hepatotoxicity (using the
protocol-specified definition of Grade 3 or 4 increase in ALT or bilirubin).
7. Other (non-TB) IRIS events
8. Quality of life assessment (measured using PROQOL-HIV, EQ-5D-3L, HIV symptom index and
Karnofsky score)
9. Adverse events and severe adverse events ascribed to TB treatment, ART or
co-trimoxazole. This will include a pre-specified analysis of drug-induced liver injury
and drug rash. This assessment will include the number of treatment interruptions for
drug adverse events.
10. Discontinuation of either ART or TB treatment for > 5 days due to adverse events
11. Number of hospitalizations and total days hospitalized
Safety and tolerability endpoints:
1. Corticosteroid-associated adverse events, classified by severity and relation to study
drug. These will include hypertension, hyperglycaemia, hypomania/mania, depression,
acne, epigastric pain, upper gastro-intestinal bleeding, Cushingoid features, new oedema
and avascular bone necrosis.
2. Laboratory safety data: glucose, full blood count and electrolytes
3. Other infections (AIDS-related, bacterial, fungal and viral) and malignancies (Kaposi's
sarcoma)
4. All grade 1, 2, 3 and 4 adverse events (clinical and laboratory using the ACTG grading
system)
Sample size: 240 participants will be enrolled over 13 months. Each participant will be
followed for 12 weeks.
Population: HIV-infected, ART-naïve adult (≥ 18 years) patients diagnosed with active
tuberculosis who have a CD4 < 100 cells/μL and who start ART within 30 days of starting TB
treatment. Other inclusion criteria include: diagnosis of TB (smear, culture, Xpert MTB/RIF
test, histology or strong clinical and radiological evidence of TB with symptomatic response
to TB treatment), eligible for and consent to starting ART and written informed consent for
trial. Exclusion criteria include: Kaposi's sarcoma, pregnancy, TB meningitis or tuberculoma
at TB diagnosis (because these patients receive corticosteroids), known rifampicin-resistant
TB, being on corticosteroids for another indication within the past 7 days, on other
immunosuppressive medication within the past 7 days and uncontrolled diabetes mellitus.
TB treatment and ART: TB treatment will be prescribed and monitored by the clinical staff in
the local HIV-TB clinic. TB treatment will be given according to South African Department of
Health guidelines. This involves rifampicin (R), isoniazid (H), ethambutol (E) and
pyrazinamide (Z) for 2 months followed by RH for 4 months. ART will be prescribed by the
clinical staff at the HIV-TB clinic according to South African Department of Health
guidelines. Standard first line ART in TB patients is tenofovir, emtricitabine (or
lamivudine) and efavirenz. Co-trimoxazole prophylaxis will be prescribed to all patients
unless a contra-indication exists.
Intervention: Oral prednisone 40mg daily for 14 doses started on the first day that ART is
taken, followed by 20mg daily for 14 doses (or identical placebo). A total of 28 days of
study medication will thus be prescribed.
Follow-up: Patients will be screened once established on TB treatment, but before starting
ART. If the patient is eligible, written informed consent will be taken. There will be six
planned study visits that will be in relation to the start of ART: week 0 (the day ART is
initiated), week 1, week 2, week 4, week 8 and week 12. Patients will be seen at unscheduled
visits if clinical deterioration occurs. If paradoxical TB-IRIS is diagnosed this will be
treated with open label prednisone at clinician discretion if symptoms are moderate or
severe. If patients experience clinical complications (eg. TB-IRIS) follow-up will be
prolonged beyond week 12 in order to stabilize their condition before referral back to the
general TB-HIV clinical service for ongoing management.
Data monitoring: The trial will be monitored by an independent Data and Safety Monitoring
Board (DSMB) comprising 3 independent researchers and an independent statistician. After an
initial meeting for agreeing on their Charter, the DSMB will meet twice (after 80 and 160
participants have completed follow-up) to review data quality and data with respect to safety
and trial endpoints. If there is evidence of harm related to study medication or trial
conduct the DSMB may advise the sponsor that trial enrollment should be stopped.
Clinical trial site: Khayelitsha Site B HIV-TB clinic (Ubuntu clinic)
Co-investigators:
Lut Lynen (Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium) Gary Maartens (University of
Cape Town) Robert J. Wilkinson (Imperial College London and University of Cape Town) Robert
Colebunders (Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium)
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