Ulcer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Anti-Herpetic Treatment Associated With Syndromic Management of Genital Ulcer in Africa: Clinical and Biological Evaluation on HIV-1 and HSV-2 Shedding (ANRS 1212)
Herpes virus type 2 (HSV-2) infection - as a cofactor of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission - can be targeted by anti-herpetic specific drugs, either as a continuous prophylactic treatment during its asymptomatic shedding phase, or as an episodic treatment during clinically-apparent genital ulcerations. The main objective of this trial will be to demonstrate that acyclovir treatment given during clinical episodes (primary infection or recurrences) can reduce genital shedding of HIV, thereby contributing to a reduction of HIV infectiousness of dually infected individuals (HIV+/HSV+).
Objectives. The proposed project is a randomised placebo-controlled, double-blinded,
multicentric therapeutic trial evaluating the association of antiherpetic treatment to the
syndromic treatment for the management genital ulcers in Africa, and its impact on the
genital shedding of HIV and of Herpes simplex hominis type 2 (HSV-2) virus.
Background. Recent epidemiological studies have shown that infection with HSV-2 is highly
prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa, and that HSV-2 seropositivity is a marker of high-risk
sexual behaviour. HSV-2 infection is increasingly being recognised as one of the commonest
causes of genital ulceration in many African countries. HSV-2 infection may act as a major
cofactor for HIV transmission, a fact that has long been underestimated. First, genital
ulcers (caused by HSV-2) are by themselves cofactors of HIV transmission, either by
increasing infectiousness of dually infected individuals (HSV+/HIV+), or by increasing
susceptibility of the seronegative partner. Second, HSV-2 infection may transactivate in
vivo the genital replication of HIV, thereby increasing the infectiousness of dually
infected individuals.
Rationale and main objective. HSV-2 infection - as a cofactor of HIV transmission - can be
targeted by anti-herpetic specific drugs, either as a continuous prophylactic treatment
during its asymptomatic shedding phase, or as an episodic treatment during
clinically-apparent genital ulcerations. The main objective of this trial will be to
demonstrate that acyclovir treatment given during clinical episodes (primary infection or
recurrences) can reduce genital shedding of free- or cell-associated HIV, thereby
contributing to a reduction of HIV infectiousness of dually infected individuals
(HIV+/HSV+). Given the present state of knowledge and hypotheses formulated around the
possible role of HSV on the HIV epidemic in Africa, the proposed research will contribute to
confirm or invalidate the existence of mutual reinforcement of HSV and HIV replication. This
will represent a study of biological plausibility for such an in vivo interaction. In
addition the chosen intervention strategy has practical and operational implications in that
it will allow the evaluation of a novel approach to syndromic management of genital ulcers
in Africa that could later lead to revisions of management guidelines.
Methods. Approximately 600 women presenting with genital ulcers will be enrolled over two
years and in two sites: Bangui (Central African Republic) and Accra (Ghana). The syndromic
management of patients will include antibiotics to cover the presumptive bacterial causes of
genital ulcerations in these settings (chancroid and syphilis), according to national and
international guidelines (CDC, UK national guidelines, WHO). In addition, women will be
randomised to receive either antiherpetic treatment (acyclovir 400 mg 3 times daily for 5
days, according to UK national guidelines - a shorter regimen than US guidelines) or placebo
(similar frequency and duration). Clinical examination and cervicovaginal samplings will be
carried out at D0 and at each follow up visit at D2, D4, D7, D14 & D28. These samples will
be tested for: etiological diagnosis of ulcers by multiplex PCR; measurement of HIV genital
viral loads (measuring free RNA and cell-associated proviral DNA) and HSV-2 DNA genital
load; and diagnosis of other common STDs (at D0). Blood samples will be collected at D0, D2
and D28 for HIV, syphilis and HSV-2 serological assays, and for HIV plasma loads as well as
CD4 measurements.
The main outcome will be the determination of the impact of anti-herpetic treatment on HIV
genital load (and as a corollary, on HSV2 genital load). It will also be possible to measure
the impact of antibiotic treatment on HIV viral load. The study will allow to evaluate the
validity of novel syndromic treatment approaches for genital ulcer disease, and a long term
outcome may be the necessary revision of syndromic management guidelines for GUD to
potentially include anti-herpetic treatment.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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