The purpose of this study is to look at the effectiveness of combination anti-HIV drug therapy (with protease inhibitors \[PIs\] or without) in patients with early HIV infections. This study also looks at whether a drug called interleukin-2 (IL-2) can boost the immune system of these patients. Doctors are not sure which anti-HIV drug combination is best to use in patients who have early HIV infection and have never received anti-HIV treatment. PIs are anti-HIV drugs that decrease viral load (level of HIV in the blood). However, PIs can cause serious side effects in some patients. Doctors would like to know if a drug combination that does not contain a PI is just as good as one that contains PIs.
Studies have suggested that an antiretroviral drug regimen of the non-nucleoside agent efavirenz (EFV) in combination with two nucleoside analogues is effective at achieving maximal viral suppression. This provides an alternative treatment to that of the more toxic PI-containing regimen. This trial examines whether a nonPI regimen with EFV is more beneficial than a PI-containing regimen when each is used in combination with the same two nucleoside analogues. A second part of the study looks at whether the addition of IL-2 may offer immunologic benefits as a co-administered drug. Patients are randomized to initiate antiretroviral therapy of a PI-based (stavudine/didanosine/ritonavir \[RTV\]/indinavir \[IDV\]) or nonPI-based (stavudine/didanosine/EFV) regimen. Within these treatment arms, they are stratified according to a positive or negative p24 antigen result. At Week 16, patients not achieving maximal viral suppression (lower than 50 copies/ml) have the option to add abacavir (ABC) or other drugs as intensification therapy. Those achieving virologic suppression (less than 50 copies/ml) are randomized either to receive IL-2 or not. At study entry, and after 12 months, tissue samples of CSF, lymph node, and genital secretions are obtained, with permission. Patients have physical exams, women of child-bearing potential have pregnancy tests, and blood samples are drawn at clinic visits 12-16 times a year over 3 years so that virologic and immunologic evaluations may be performed. Compensation for time and transportation is given.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
165
400 mg tablets equaling 1600 mg daily
100 mg liquid capsules equaling 400 mg daily
300 mg capsules equaling 600 mg daily. Administration based on individual results after 16 weeks.
200 mg capsules equaling 600 mg daily
30-40 mg capsules equaling 60 or 80 mg daily
250-400 mg E.coated tablets equaling 250 or 400 mg daily
Subcutaneous injection equaling 15 x 10\^6 IU daily dose. Administration based on individual results after 16 weeks and randomization.
Viridae Clinical Sciences / University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Centre de traitment d'immunodeficience
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Centre Hospitalier de la Universite de Montreal (CHUM)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Institut Thoracique de Montreal
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Virologic: A. Plasma viral load B. Tissue viral load (CNS, lymphoid tissues, genital tract) C. HIV DNA (proviral) levels in circulating mononuclear cells D. Phenotypic and genotypic antiretroviral drug resistance
Time frame: Throughout study
Immunologic: A. Evaluation of CD4, CD8, CD45RA, CD45RO phenotypes and defined activation markers B. Evaluation of the diversity and persistence of the T cell repertoire (CD4+, CD8+) in the circulation and lymphoid tissues
Time frame: Throughout study
Immunologic: C. Functional CD4+ cellular assays (class II MHC tetramers) D. Thymic regeneration as studied by the exclusion circle assay E. Evolution of Western blot banding patterns F. Evolution of anti-HIV neutralizing antibody levels
Time frame: Throughout study
Clinical: A. Minor opportunistic infections or AIDS-defining conditions B. Death C. Clinical or laboratory adverse events D. Evaluation of adherence to therapy E. Evaluation of lipodystrophy
Time frame: Throughout study
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