Hiv Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pharmacokinetics of Tenofovir in Blood, Plasma and Urine of Healthy Adults With Perfect, Median and Low Drug Adherence
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) are critical to
the success of HIV treatment and therapeutic prevention. No accurate, objective point-of-care
test is available to monitor adherence to either ART or PrEP. The inability to accurately
identify poorly adherent patients will lead to more HIV infections (from failed PrEP and
non-suppressive ART), more drug-resistant virus (selected by failing ART), and unnecessary
switching to costly second- or third-line ART (when first-line regimens with virologic
efficacy but non-adherence are stopped inappropriately). To address this critical knowledge
gap, the investigators have developed a novel point-of-care test to detect the presence of
tenofovir—the most common drug in both ART and PrEP treatments worldwide—in fingerprick blood
or urine as an objective measure of ART and PrEP adherence.
Our central hypothesis is that the pharmacokinetics of tenofovir in blood and urine will
support point-of-care tenofovir detection as an objective measure of adherence, and that our
point-of-care tenofovir assay will have the ability to discriminate different drug adherence
levels. The investigators will test our central hypotheses by pursuing the following two
specific aims: (1) To assess our novel point-of-care tenofovir (TFV) assay in whole blood and
urine specimens within a controlled pharmacokinetic study of HIV-negative adults receiving
tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF) with low, moderate, and perfect adherence; and (2) To
validate our novel point-of-care tenofovir (TFV) assay on blood and urine specimens using an
existing biorepository from a real-world clinical HIV prevention study.
This work is innovative because it develops an entirely new category of rapid diagnostic
testing for monitoring ART and PrEP adherence at the clinical point of care. Our rapid assay
will help clinicians identify patients in need of more adherence counseling, which when
implemented will prevent HIV acquisition, emergence of drug resistant virus, and unnecessary
ART regimen switching—measures that will improve national HIV programs and help preserve the
global supply of an effective HIV medication.
Objectives of the Study
Primary Objective:
• To determine the pharmacokinetics of tenofovir (TFV) in blood, urine and plasma in adults
with perfect, median and low adherence to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF).
Secondary Objectives
- To determine the rate of tenofovir washout in blood, plasma and urine among participants
with various levels of TDF adherence.
- To determine the steady-state concentrations of TFV in blood and plasma among controlled
levels of TDF adherence.
- To compare the agreement between TFV in blood, plasma and urine concentrations.
- To determine the intracellular tenofovir-diphosphate (TFV-DP) trough concentrations in
peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and dried blood spot (DBS) samples in adults
with perfect, median and low drug adherence.
- To identify possible concentration thresholds for the clinical interpretation of a
binary point-of-care adherence test for measurement of TFV (and/or TFV-DP) in relation
to adherence to TDF.
Design:
The study design is a randomized, open-label pharmacokinetic study in healthy adult
volunteers. The study involves collection of clinical data and biological specimens, and
subjects will provide written informed consent to participate. Healthy adult volunteers (HIV
serology and hepatitis B surface Ag negative) will be enrolled. Once written consent is
obtained, the screening visit will be performed. The study team will obtain each
participant's phone number, address, and relevant contact information.
Screening Visit:
Participant screening will be performed within 14 days of enrollment. A detailed background
demographic and health questionnaire will be administered. Ten mL of blood will be drawn for
baseline assessments: complete blood count, HIV antibody testing, Hepatitis B surface Ag
testing, renal and liver function tests and storage of blood in the biorepository. The blood
and chemistry tests will be used to exclude subjects with any abnormal laboratory test among
neutrophil count, hemoglobin, platelets, AST, or ALT. An abnormal test will be defined as
Grade ≥3 by DAIDS Table for Grading the Severity of Adult and Pediatric Adverse Events,
Version 2.0 Nov. 2014). The results of the clinical examination and baseline laboratory
assessments will be reviewed for inclusion/exclusion criteria.
Entry:
All entry visits will begin on a Monday morning. After receiving in-depth information on the
study schedule, subjects meeting the inclusion criteria will be enrolled and randomized
(1:1:1) into one of 3 groups to receive a controlled number of doses of Truvada® (Gilead
Sciences Inc.), which contains tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF, 300 mg) and emtricitabine
(FTC, 200 mg) for 6 weeks. The participant will be carefully explained about their
drug-dosing schedule, visit schedule and potential medication side effects.
We will enroll a total of 30 adults with evaluable PK samples (10 per group). All
participants will start TDF in the morning of the Entry visit. The 6-week treatment period
was chosen in order to ensure concentrations of tenofovir in the different matrices (i.e.
blood, plasma, urine, PBMCs) mimic the expected conditions in patients with chronic dosing of
perfect, median and low drug adherence. The blood/urine sampling schedule is based on the
reported tenofovir plasma half-life and results of previous PK studies.
Tenofovir concentrations will be determined in each participant during three study phases (1)
lead-in period, (2) intensive PK sampling, and (3) wash-out period.
Phase 1: Lead-in Period (Entry to 6 weeks) Visit Prior to 2nd Dose: Immediately prior to the
second dose (i.e. Group 1: 24 post-dose (Day #2; Tuesday Morning); Group 2: 48 hours
post-dose (Day #3; Wednesday Morning); and Group 3; 72 hours post-dose (Day #4; Thursday
Morning) the subject will return to the hospital. A single blood sample will be drawn (5 mL).
From this venous blood sample, 5 dried blood spots (50 µL/spot) will be prepared on a Whatman
903 filter paper card. The remaining blood will be centrifuged and the plasma stored. A
single fingerstick whole blood sample will be collected and on a second Whatman 903 filter
paper card 2 dried blood spots (50 µL/spot) will be prepared. A separate 10 mL blood drawn
will be taken to collect PBMCs for determination of intracellular tenofovir-DP
concentrations. Finally, a spot urine sample will be collected (5-10 mL). All samples will be
stored at -70°C to -80°C.
Weeks 3 and 5 (both Monday morning, pre-dose): A single blood sample will be drawn (5 mL)
prior to dose administration. From this venous blood sample, 5 dried blood spots (50 µL/spot)
will be prepared on a Whatman 903 filter paper card. The remaining blood will be centrifuged
and the plasma stored. A single fingerstick whole blood sample will be collected and 2 dried
blood spots (50 µL/spot) will be prepared on a second Whatman 903 filter paper card. A
separate 10 mL blood drawn will be taken to collect PBMCs for determination of intracellular
tenofovir-DP concentrations. Finally, a spot urine sample will be collected (5-10 mL). All
samples will be stored at -70°C to -80°C. Renal and liver function tests will be performed.
Phase 2: Intensive PK sampling (starting Monday morning of Week 7 for 24 hours) Week 7
Intensive PK visit: On the Monday morning of Week 7, subjects will return to the hospital in
the early morning. A medical officer will conduct a physical examination and blood will be
drawn for laboratory safety evaluations (AST, and ALT). Following their normal morning daily
schedule of drug intake, a pre-dose blood sample will be drawn and a single Truvada® tablet
will be administered on an empty stomach (at least 6 hour fast beforehand). This will be the
last dose of Truvada® for all subjects. Venous blood (3 mL/time point) will be collected at
1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, and 24 hours post-dose. At each time point, a venous blood DBS (5
spots) and fingerstick (2 spots) will be collected. Renal and liver function tests will be
performed.
Urine samples will be collected pre-dose and over the intervals of 0-4 hours, 4-8 hours, 8-12
hours, and 12-24 hours. Subjects will have an additional 10 mL blood drawn pre-dose and PBMCs
will be collected and stored at -70°C to -80°C. After 24 hours, the participant will be
discharged from the hospital. The subject will be asked to collect all their urine until
their next study visit in 24 hours.
Phase 3: Wash-out PK sampling (Weeks 7 to Week 10) Week 7 (Wednesday to Saturday): After the
intensive PK sampling is complete, participants will return to the clinic once a day for the
next 4 days (i.e. until the Saturday of Week 7) for a single venous blood draw (5mL),
fingerprick sample collection for dried blood spot, and a spot urine sample (5-10 mL). The
subject will be asked to collect all their urine until their next clinic visit.
Week 8 (Monday and Thursday): A single venous blood draw, fingerprick sample collection for
dried blood spot, and a spot urine sample (5-10 mL) will be drawn on Monday and Thursday of
Week 8. A single PBMC sample (10 mL blood) will be collected on Monday morning of week 8
(i.e. 1 week since last TDF dose).
Week 9 (Monday): A single venous blood draw, fingerprick sample collection for dried blood
spot, and a spot urine sample (5-10 mL) will be drawn on Monday. A single PBMC sample (10 mL
blood) will also be collected on Monday (i.e. 2 weeks since last TDF dose).
Week 10 (Monday): A single venous blood draw, fingerprick sample collection for dried blood
spot, and a spot urine sample (5-10 mL) will be drawn on Monday. A single PBMC sample (10 mL
blood) will also be collected on Monday morning (i.e. 3 weeks since last TDF dose).
End of Study visit (i.e. end of Week 10):
A single venous blood draw, fingerprick sample collection for dried blood spot, and a spot
urine test (5-10 mL) will be drawn on Monday. A single PBMC sample (10 mL blood) will also be
collected on Monday (i.e. 4 weeks since last TDF dose). A renal and liver function tests will
be performed.
At this time the participants will have completed the study and no additional evaluations
will be performed.
Tenofovir concentrations will be measured using validated liquid chromatography-triple
quadrupole mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) assays at the Faculty of Associated Medical Sciences
at Chiang Mai University. Intracellular tenofovir-diphosphate (TFV-DP) concentrations will be
determined using a validated a LC-MS based assay.
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