HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessing Tenofovir Pharmacology in Older HIV Infected Individuals Receiving Tenofovir-based Antiretroviral Therapy
Tenofovir continues to play a vital role in the treatment of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and as the age of the HIV-infected population increases in the United States and worldwide, there is an urgent need to understand the extent to which older age influences the way this antiretroviral medication works in the body. The investigators study aims to characterize and compare the pharmacology of tenofovir in older versus younger HIV-infected adults and to assess kidney function over the course of approximately one year. The investigators will be analyzing tenofovir levels in different compartments of the blood and in hair samples, and will be assessing the relationship between tenofovir concentrations and changes in kidney function over time in the older and younger cohorts. Lastly, the investigators will be evaluating the relationship between tenofovir concentrations and functional status (including body composition, bone mineral density, and frailty) in study participants.
Despite a growing population of older HIV infected persons world-wide, major knowledge gaps
exist with regards to the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of antiretroviral drugs in
older persons. In the United States, the median age of HIV-infected persons is expected to
surpass 50 years by 2015. A global report from UNAIDS indicated that for the first time
since the start of the HIV epidemic, 10% of the adult population currently living with HIV
in low- and middle-income countries is aged 50 or older, and in high-income countries,
approximately 30% of adults living with HIV are aged 50 years and over. Hypertension,
diabetes, cardiovascular disease, cancer, osteoporosis, cognitive decline, and hepatic and
renal dysfunction are commonly encountered problems in older persons. Frailty is also
commonly encountered in the aging population and is defined as the cumulative effects of
age-related declines in multiple physiological systems and homeostatic mechanisms, resulting
in greater vulnerability to stressors. People living with HIV have a higher prevalence and
earlier onset of age-related declines in health, including frailty, compared to
HIV-uninfected adults. The emphasis of HIV management over the past decade has shifted from
the prevention of AIDS complications, to the management of chronic non-infectious
comorbidities in an increasingly older and more complicated patient population. Age-related
declines in health along with established changes in body composition as individuals get
older (increased body fat, decreased lean mass), may impact the pharmacokinetics of
antiretroviral medications used in the treatment of HIV, but this has not been studied
adequately. To date, there is a substantial lack of information regarding the
pharmacokinetics of antiretroviral medications, including tenofovir (TFV), in older
HIV-infected adults. As evidence, the 'Geriatric Use' sections of the Viread® (tenofovir
disoproxil fumarate, TDF)-containing products state the following, "Clinical studies of
Viread® did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to determine whether
they respond differently from younger subjects. In general, dose selection for the elderly
patient should be cautious, keeping in mind the greater frequency of decreased hepatic,
renal, or cardiac function, and of concomitant disease or other drug therapy." These gaps in
knowledge arise from underrepresentation of older individuals in the early phases of drug
development. This is especially true for antiretroviral drugs because HIV-infection
afflicted mostly young people at the time most antiretroviral drugs were being developed. It
is important to realize that HIV-infected individuals are now reaching older ages in high
numbers, and that studies are urgently needed to optimize drug responses in this population.
A major gap in knowledge is the lack of information surrounding the association between
functional (frailty) status and the pharmacology of antiretroviral medications in older
HIV-infected individuals.
As older adults experience natural declines in renal function, drugs that are renally
eliminated may accumulate in the systemic circulation, thus increasing the risk for
toxicities. Tenofovir is renally eliminated and its principal dose-related toxicity is new
or worsening renal impairment, meaning that slowed elimination may accelerate damage to the
kidneys in this population. In order to assess changes in renal function clinically,
regression equations that incorporate age, such as Cockgroft-Gault and MDRD, are utilized,
but depend on serum creatinine (endogenous muscle byproduct). Serum creatinine is not an
ideal marker in older populations because muscle mass decreases with age. A better method to
quantify actual GFR is by evaluating the plasma clearance of the contrast agent, iohexol
(iGFR). This approach is considered a gold standard for assessing renal function at all
ages.
The Anderson Laboratory recently validated a method for measuring the intracellular
concentration of tenofovir-di-phosphate (TFV-DP), the active form of tenofovir, in red blood
cells (RBC) using dried blood spots (DBS )to indicate both recent and cumulative dosing.
Similar to the benefits provided by hemoglobin A1C testing in diabetes therapy, TFV-DP in
DBS testing allows for a much needed quantitative approach for assessing cumulative exposure
to tenofovir over long periods of time. This is enabled by the 17 day half-life for TFV-DP
in RBC. Measuring TFV concentrations in scalp hair is an alternative method for measuring
cumulative exposure to the drug over long periods of time (weeks to months), as demonstrated
by researchers at the University of California San Francisco.
These novel biomarkers for long-term tenofovir exposure provide an opportunity to compare
cumulative tenofovir exposure in older versus younger individuals. Long-term use of
tenofovir is associated with two main adverse effects, namely changes in bone mineral
density and renal function, however the link between age, tenofovir exposure, and rate of
decline in bone mineral density and renal function have not been fully elucidated. The goals
of the present study are to characterize and compare the pharmacokinetics of TFV in older
HIV-infected adults versus younger HIV-infected adults and to assess the changes in bone
mineral density and renal function (using iohexol) over an approximate one year time period
in these two cohorts. The study will also include measures of body composition (using
duel-energy x-ray absorptiometry, DXA) and functional status (frailty) and will assess the
relationships between these factors and TFV pharmacology in both the younger and older
HIV-infected cohorts.
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