To study the toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and antiretroviral effectiveness of combined oral zidovudine (AZT) and intermittent intravenous foscarnet therapy in stable AIDS or AIDS related complex (ARC) patients who have already received AZT for 8 - 52 weeks. It is hypothesized that the maximum AZT antiretroviral effect, which occurs at 8 weeks of therapy, will be enhanced by 2 weeks of foscarnet treatment, given at the same time by intermittent intravenous infusion. In addition, the further lowering of serum p24 antigen concentration that should occur during combined therapy might continue when oral AZT therapy is continued without foscarnet.
It is hypothesized that the maximum AZT antiretroviral effect, which occurs at 8 weeks of therapy, will be enhanced by 2 weeks of foscarnet treatment, given at the same time by intermittent intravenous infusion. In addition, the further lowering of serum p24 antigen concentration that should occur during combined therapy might continue when oral AZT therapy is continued without foscarnet. There is a 4-week prestudy monitoring period during which AZT alone is administered on an outpatient basis, followed by a 2-week study period during which both intravenous foscarnet and oral AZT are administered in the hospital. During the subsequent 6-month follow-up period, oral AZT is administered and patients receive clinical evaluations. AZT is held for 48 hours on days before hospitalization and for 24 hours at the end of the hospitalization.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
12
University of Minnesota, ACTU
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Unc Aids Crs
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
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