Overview

HIV Maintenance Therapy With T-20 During HAART Interruption

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2003-04-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
This study will evaluate whether a drug called T-20 can slow or prevent a rapid return of HIV in the blood when HAART (highly active antiretroviral therapy) is stopped temporarily. HAART is a multi-dose regimen that is very effective in suppressing HIV and perhaps slowing or halting progression of the viral infection towards AIDS. However, this treatment is not problem-oriented. It cannot completely rid the body of virus, and long-term therapy carries a risk of toxicity (harmful side effects). Moreover, the treatment is difficult to adhere to because of the many pills and capsules that must be taken daily. When patients stop taking HAART, their viral levels climb again. This study will see if T-20 can prolong the time it takes for HIV blood levels to rise in patients who stop HAART temporarily. The results may provide insight into possible new HAART-sparing treatments. HIV-infected patients 18 years of age and older who have received HAART for at least 1 month may be eligible for this study. Candidates will be screened with a medical history, physical examination, blood and urine tests and possibly a chest X-ray and electrocardiogram (EKG). Participants will receive either 100 Mg. of T-20 twice a day or 200 Mg. once a day, injected under the skin, and their normal HAART regimen for 3 days. (Patients or a caregiver will be taught how to give the T-20 injections.) On the fourth day, HAART will be stopped and all patients will receive 100 Mg. of T-20 twice a day for 6 weeks. Blood will be drawn weekly from the second to the sixth week after stopping HAART to check viral levels and CD4+ T cell counts. At the end of the 6 weeks, T-20 will be stopped and HAART will be restarted. Patients will then be evaluated once a month until their viral level is less than 50. The final clinic visit will be one month after this time. In addition to blood draws, patients will undergo leukapheresis before beginning T-20 and possibly again when they restart HAART and at the end of the study. For this procedure, whole blood is collected through a needle placed in an arm vein, similar to donating blood. The blood circulates through a machine that separates it into its components. The white cells are then removed, and the red cells, platelets and plasma are returned to the body, either through the same needle used to draw the blood or through a second needle placed in the other arm. The white cells are used to study T cell function and levels and to detect hidden virus.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA:

1. Documentation of HIV-1 infection by licensed ELISA test kit and confirmed by a second
method (e.g. Western Blot).

2. Absolute CD4+ T-cell count of greater than or equal to 300/mm(3) within 30 days before
randomization (For patients who are status post-splenectomy, also CD4+ T-cell greater
than 20 percent)

3. Receiving HAART (at least an NNRTI or a PI and at least 3 drugs) with at least 1 viral
load test below the limit of detection (at least less than 500 copies/ml) greater than
or equal to 3 months before screening.

4. Stable HAART regimen greater than or equal to 1 month.

5. Two confirmatory viral loads of less than 50 copies/ml prior to enrollment.

6. Age at least 18 years.

7. For women of childbearing potential, a negative pregnancy test (serum or urine) is
required within 14 days prior to treatment assignment.

8. Ability to inject, or willingness to have injected by another person, T20 as required
by protocol.

9. Laboratory values (within 30 days prior to randomization):

1. AST no more than 5 x the upper limit of normal (ULN).

2. Total or direct bilirubin no more than 2 times ULN unless there is a pattern
consistent with Gilbert's syndrome or the patient is receiving indinavir.

3. Creatinine no more than 2.0 mg/dL.

4. Platelet count at least 50,000/microliters.

10. Willingness to provide blood samples for storage that may be used in future studies of
HIV infection and/or immunopathogenesis.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

1. Concurrent malignancy, or any other disease state, requiring cytotoxic chemotherapy.

2. Symptomatic for significant HIV-related illnesses, such as opportunistic infections
and malignancies other than mucocutaneous Kaposi's sarcoma.

3. A history of receiving both an NNRTI and a PI.

4. Use of experimental, unlicensed antiretrovirals less than or equal to 6 months prior
to enrollment. An exception may be made for hydroxyurea according to the judgement of
the Principal Investigator.

5. Current use of IL-2 or abacavir or prior participation in a HAART interruption study.

6. Pregnancy or breastfeeding during study period.

7. Significant cardiac, pulmonary, kidney, rheumatologic, gastrointestinal, or CNS
disease as detectable on routine history, physical examination , or screening
laboratory studies.

8. Psychiatric illness that, in the opinion of the PI, might interfere with study
compliance.

9. Active substance abuse or history of prior substance abuse that may interfere with
protocol compliance or compromise patient safety.

10. Refusal to practice safe sex or use precautions against pregnancy (effective birth
control or abstinence).

11. Known history or laboratory evidence of chronic hepatitis B infection requiring 3TC
for control including surface antigen positivity.

12. Receiving salvage HAART, i.e. evidence of clinical resistance to licensed
antiretrovirals.

Individuals accepted into the protocol who subsequently violate exclusion criteria 7-9 will
be offered further counseling and psychiatric evaluation if indicated. If the situation is
not resolved within a reasonable period of time, the PI, in consultation with the care
team, may terminate subject participation.