HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase II, Randomized, Controlled, Pilot Study of Antiretroviral Switch at Lower Versus Higher HIV-1 RNA Levels in Subjects Experiencing Virologic Relapse on a Current HAART Regimen
This study will look at people who have been taking anti-HIV drugs but still have detectable
levels of HIV. The purpose of the study is to find out what happens in those people who
change anti-HIV drugs when their viral load reaches 200 copies compared to those who change
anti-HIV drugs when their viral load reaches 10,000 copies. This study will also look at
drug resistance (how well HIV responds to drugs), viral fitness (how well drug-resistant HIV
copies itself), and immunologic reconstitution (how well the immune system recognizes
various infections, including HIV).
Many patients experience virologic relapse (increase in viral load after sustained viral
load suppression) within 1 to 2 years of taking anti-HIV drugs. The approach to treatment
for patients who experience virologic relapse while on a highly active antiretroviral
therapy (HAART) has not been defined. Current guidelines recommend switching to a new
treatment regimen as soon as possible to prevent HIV from becoming even more resistant to
anti-HIV drugs. However, there is evidence that patients can benefit from staying on the
same HAART drugs, even after virologic relapse. This study wants to find what happens when
drugs are changed immediately after virologic relapse (when the viral load is lower)
compared to what happens if drugs are changed only after a delay (when the viral load is
higher).
Virologic relapse occurs within 1 to 2 years of antiretroviral therapy in up to 50 percent
of HIV-infected individuals. The best treatment approach for patients who experience
virologic rebound while on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has not been
defined. Current guidelines recommend switching to a new treatment regimen shortly after
virologic rebound in an effort to avoid sequential accumulation of multiple resistance
mutations. However, early treatment switching has numerous disadvantages: risk of virologic
rebound on the new therapy, a limited number of drug combinations available to treat such
rebounds, and difficulty in obtaining early genotypic and phenotypic drug-resistance
information to guide treatment modification. Delaying a switch to a new antiretroviral
regimen has the advantage of preserving future treatment options, and HIV levels may remain
partially suppressed even after drug-resistant mutants emerge. Moreover, several
observational studies describe maintenance of immunologic and clinical benefits of HAART
even after virologic rebound. Delayed treatment switches, however, raise concerns about
sequential accumulation of drug resistance mutations that may diminish the chances of viral
resuppression with successive HAART regimens, and the long-term immune consequences of
virologic rebound on HAART are not known. It is therefore important to evaluate the viral
and immunologic responses among patients randomized to either an early or delayed HAART
switch.
This study enrolls patients who have a viral load of at least 200, but less than 10,000
copies/ml. The patients are randomized into 2 treatment arms. Arm A (immediate switch)
patients have genotypic resistance testing at entry. Based on the resistance test results,
their antiretroviral treatment regimen is modified to a switch treatment regimen. Switch
treatment initiates no later than Week 4. Arm B (delayed switch) patients continue their
current antiretroviral regimen and have genotypic resistance testing when their plasma HIV-1
RNA levels reach 10,000 copies/ml or greater. Based on the resistance test results, their
antiretroviral treatment regimen is modified to a switch treatment regimen. Switch treatment
initiates no later than 4 weeks from the date of at least 10,000 copies/ml viral load, or
from the date of an absolute CD4 count reduced by 20 percent from baseline value. Patients
who never meet the switch criteria remain on study.
All patients are followed for a minimum of 48 weeks after entry. No antiretroviral drugs are
provided by the study.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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