The main purpose of this study is to compare two different types of HIV treatments, in terms of effectiveness and improvement of side effects, for patients who are diagnosed with a more advanced HIV infection. Patients with advanced HIV infections are otherwise known as 'late presenters'. There are many effective treatments for HIV available; however, for late presenting patients the investigators do not know which type of treatment performs best. This is the first large study to compare treatments for patients in this situation, and the investigators hope that the results of this study will help doctors decide which treatments to use in the future. The two different types of treatment the investigators are comparing both contain a mixture of drugs that work together to combat HIV: The Boosted Protease Inhibitor combination (PI) which is a combination tablet containing: darunavir, cobicistat, emtricitabine and tenofovir alafenamide. It was approved for use in Europe under the brand name Symtuza®. The Integrase Inhibitor combination (INI). Which is a combination tablet containing: bictegravir, emtricitabine and tenofovir alafenamide. This is a a newer combination which was approved for use in Europe in June 2018 under the brand name of Biktarvy®. The main difference between the two treatments is how each one fights a HIV infection. They both stop a part of the virus from working (i.e. inhibit it), to prevent it from making copies of itself. The PI treatment contains drugs to stop the protease part of the virus, whereas the INI treatment contains drugs to stop the integrase part. In recent studies, it appears that treatments containing integrase inhibitors may be better for late presenting patients. They have been shown to quickly bring down the amount of virus in the body, and the side effects may be more acceptable to late presenters. To compare the two treatments, half of the participants on this study will be given the PI treatment, and the other half will be given the INI treatment.
The effectiveness of HIV antiretroviral therapy (ART) has consistently improved over the years. This is largely due to newer drugs having improved antiviral effectiveness and more tolerable side effect profiles; resulting in better viral suppression and improved treatment adherence. On the other hand, most recent clinical trials look at the effectiveness of ART in patients with less advanced disease. These patients usually suffer from less related diseases, drug-drug interactions, and other risks for treatment failure. Outside of these trials, the number of patients who present to clinic with a more developed advanced HIV infection, known as 'late presenters', remains high across Europe. Trials for these patients have tended to focus on the time of starting treatment and the management of infections. Much less is known about which ART treatments perform best for these late presenting patients; particularly in terms of virus suppression, immune system recovery, side effects and improvement of AIDs related diseases. No specific drug combinations have been compared in appropriate clinical trials before, and the international guidelines for first line treatment judge all therapies as equal standard of care for these patients. The investigators anticipate that Integrase inhibitor containing regimes may be better suited to patients with advanced disease, due to their beneficial side-effect profile and ability to rapidly decrease viral load levels. Therefore the investigators are conducting this clinical trial to compare an integrase inhibitor regime, against a protease inhibitor regime in patients with advanced HIV infection. The aim of the study is to demonstrate the non-inferiority of Biktarvy® against Symtuza®. Patients will be recruited from sites across Europe, and randomized onto either arm of the study. After randomisation onto either treatment regime, patients will attend approximately 9 follow-up visits over the course of a year. During these visits, patients will be asked to complete two questionnaires, to assess their quality of life and HIV symptoms. They will also be asked to provide a number of blood samples. These samples are to ensure that the patient is not resistant to the study drug and that their disease is not worsening. Samples to test for study drug resistance will be shipped to a laboratory for analysis in the even that the patient experiences virological failure. Biktarvy® will be supplied from Gilead and Symtuza® will be provided by Janssen Pharmaceuticals.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
447
Institute of Tropical Medicine
Antwerp, Belgium
CHU Saint-Pierre
Brussels, Belgium
University Hospital Ghent
Ghent, Belgium
Hopital Europeen Marseille
Marseille, France
Groupe Hospitalier Sud Ile-de-France (Melun)
Melun, France
Hôpital Gui de Chauliac
Treatment Failure
Composite outcome: treatment failure due to either virological or clinical reasons. Virological reasons can either be insufficient virological response or viral rebound. Clinical reasons can be death related to HIV/AIDS/opportunistic infection or severe bacterial infection, new or recurrent AIDS defining event, any serious non-AIDS defining event or clinically relevant adverse events of any grade or immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome requiring treatment
Time frame: Earliest at 12 weeks, latest 48 weeks
Proportion of Patients With HIV-RNA Viral Load <50 Copies/mL
at week 24, 36, 48
Time frame: Week 24, 36 and 48
Time to Reach CD4 (Cluster of Differentiation 4) Count >200/µL
Time frame: Through study completion, up to 48 weeks.
Proportion of Patients With CD4 Cell Count <200 and < 350μL at Week 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48
Time frame: 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48 weeks
CD4/CD8 (Cluster of Differentiation 8) Ratio
CD4/CD8 ratio at week 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48
Time frame: Week 4, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48
Incidence of Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome
Incidence of Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome
Time frame: Week 48
Number of Participants With Hospitalisation or Relapse of Specific Opportunistic or Bacterial Infection
Start/Stop of hospitalization for any reason Start/Stop of opportunistic infections as listed within Appendix 3 (AIDS defining events according to https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5710a2.htm) Start/Stop of severe BI, which consists of any of bacterial pneumonia, invasive bacterial infection (IBI) or any bacterial infectious disorder with grade 3 severity or requiring unscheduled hospital admission. An IBI is defined as the isolation of a bacterial organism from a normally sterile body site, or for bacterial nucleic acid to be detected at a normally sterile body site. Sterile body sites include blood, cerebrospinal fluid, pleural fluid, pericardial fluid, peritoneal fluid, joint fluid, bone aspirate, or a deep tissue abscess.
Time frame: Week 48
Number of Participants With Treatment-related Adverse Events as Assessed by Division of AIDS Adverse Event (AE) Grading Table Corrected Version 2.1-July 2017
Time frame: Week 48
ART and OI/BI Treatment Changes and Dose Modifications Due to Toxicities and DDI With ART, and IRIS Through Week 48
Antiretroviral therapy and opportunistic or bacterial infection treatment changes and dose modifications due to toxicities and drug-drug interaction with antiretroviral therapy, and Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome
Time frame: Week 48
Health Care Resource Use, Including Number of Participants With Critical Care and Emergency Room Visits
Time frame: Week 48
QOL and Functional Status Outcomes, Including Overall Self-reported QOL and Functional Status Compared in the Two Groups at Week 48
EQ-5D-3L (European Quality of life - 5 Dimensions - 3 Levels) and HIV Symptoms Index questionnaires will be completed by patients throughout the study to assess any change throughout their treatment Quality of life (EQ-5D-3L questionnaire) Scale is VAS Score which runs from 0 (worst health imaginable) to 100 (best health imaginable). We report the mean change from Baseline to W48. The HIV Symptom Index score is the sum of frequency ratings for the 20 selected symptoms; the score could range from 0 to 80 (80 being worst score). We report the mean change from Baseline to W48.
Time frame: Week 48
Discontinuation or Modification of Study Medication Due to Insufficient Virological Response or Resistance Mutation Development
Discontinuation or modification of the single tablet regimen due virological reasons defined as a) Insufficient virological response, either: 1. HIV-1 RNA reduction \< 1 log 10 copies/mL at week 12, or 2. Viral load \> 50 HIV-1 RNA copies/mL at week 48 b) Viral rebound, which is subsequently confirmed at the following scheduled or unscheduled visit, defined as either: a. Rebound of HIV-1 RNA to \>200 copies/mL after having achieved HIV-1 RNA \<50 copies/mL b. Rebound of HIV RNA by \>1 log 10 copies/mL from nadir value, for patients whose viral load has never been suppressed below 50 copies/mL
Time frame: Week 48
Duration of Hospitalisations
Duration of hospitalization for any reason
Time frame: Week 48
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