The PLUTO trial aims to contribute to the worldwide search for a functional cure of HIV. One the strategies ("shock and kill' strategy) aims to reverse the HIV-reservoir from latency by increasing cell-associated HIV-RNA, which will lead to increased antigen presentation, trigger immune recognition, and facilitate the elimination of reservoir cells. Participants of the trial are adults with HIV with undetectable viral load that are able to give informed consent to participate in the trial, in total 30 patients will be recruited. The investigational medical compounds in this trial are topiramate, lenalidomide and pyrimethamine, which will be combined. These are all licensed drugs for other conditions. The study consists of two phases. In phase I participants will receive a single dose of the IMPs, as combination therapy. Sampling will be performed before, during and after medical treatment to evaluate latency reversal and safety endpoints. In phase II, participants will receive the combination of IMPs which is the most potent and within safety limits selected from phase I during a four-week treatment. Sampling will take place on a weekly basis to assess latency reversal, reservoir reduction and safety. Participants will be recruited from the Erasmus MC, Amsterdam university Medical Center, Radboud University Medical Center and the University Medical Center Utrecht.
Rationale Though combined antiretroviral therapy (ART) has made HIV a clinically manageable chronic illness by preventing viral replication, HIV poses great burdens on PLWH and society to this day. Due to the presence of a stable, latent viral reservoir, the virus rebounds when ART is stopped. Additionally this reservoir fuels inflammation with related comorbidities. Finding therapies to reduce the reservoir are therefore an important research objective. One strategy to shrink or eliminate the latent reservoir aims to reverse the reservoir from latency, leading to increased antigen presentation and trigger immune recognition (the "shock and kill" strategy). Several latency reversal agents (LRA) have been identified. Though single LRA treatment are effective to a limited extent, they have not resulted in significant HIV reservoir reduction. PLUTO, aims to study novel combinations of promising LRAs with different targets to reactivate and reduce the latent viral reservoir by identifying the combination with strongest latency reversal of phase I of our study and assessing latency reversal and reservoir decay after prolonged treatment in phase II of our study. Objectives Primary objectives phase I: \- To assess the efficacy of LRA combinations during a one day treatment on HIV reservoir reactivation in people living with HIV. Primary objectives phase II: \- Efficacy of dual LRA combination treatments on HIV reservoir reduction. Main trial endpoints Phase I Primary endpoint: • Fold change in cell-associated HIV-RNA at time points 6, and 24 hours compared to baseline Phase II Primary endpoint: • Log transformed HIV-DNA at T=4w compared to T=0 Trial design Proof of concept two-phase sequential randomized controlled trial. Phase I consists of three arms receiving a single dose combination treatment, with a 7-day follow-up. Phase II consists of a single arm receiving a four-week treatment with the selected treatment from phase I, and a with a total follow-up duration of five weeks. Trial population Phase I 30 people with HIV-1 with inclusion criteria: ≥18years of age, plasma HIV-RNA \>1000c/mL before ART, current plasma HIV-RNA \<50c/ml for at least two measurements on uninterrupted ART and current CD4+T-cells \> 200/mm3. Phase II A minimum of 16 people with HIV-1 with the same inclusion criteria. All participants from phase I are eligible, and may move on to, phase II with additional consent. In case the required number of participants are not reached from phase I, new participants can be recruited following the same selection procedure as in phase I. Interventions Phase I The investigational drugs are Pyrimethamine, Lenalidomide, and Topiramate. Patients will be randomized 1:1:1 in one of three arms to receive a single dose of LRA combination of two investigational drugs Phase II Compound combination with highest latency reversing potential, within safety limits and taking patient participant preference into account is the phase II intervention. Dosing is adjusted to achieve steady state concentrations similar to phase I.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
Pyrimethamine is a registered antiprotozoal agent, which is used for treating toxoplasmosis and malaria. As a latency reversing agent it exerts its effect by targeting the BAF chromatin remodeling complex involved in maintaining a transcriptional repression.
Lenalidomide is a registered immunomodulatory drug, registered for multipel myeloma, lymphoma's and Kaposi Sarcoma. As an LRA it targets transcription factor IKZF1, a transcriptional repressor.
Topiramate is a drug registered to for migraine prophylaxis and epilepsy. It binds to GRIK5 at the proviral promotor and inhibits its function. GRIK5 derepresses virus transcription initiation with latency reversal as a result.
Amsterdam University Medical Center
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Radboud University Medical Center
Nijmegen, Netherlands
Erasmus MC
Rotterdam, Netherlands
University Medical Center Utrecht
Utrecht, Netherlands
Phase I primary outcome: Fold change in cell-associated HIV-RNA
The fold change in cell-associated HIV-RNA within and between the study arms
Time frame: At time points 6 and 24 hours after treatment, compared to baseline
Phase II primary outcome: Log transformed HIV-DNA
The change in log transformed HIV-DNA within the treatment group. Measured using IPDA and SQuHIVLa
Time frame: At time point 4 weeks compared to baseline
Phase I & II: Clinical safety and tolerability of the LRA drug combination.
The number and severity of clinical and biochemical adverse events assessed using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 6
Time frame: Phase I: 1 week Phase II: 5 weeks
Phase I: Participant preference on the latency reversing agent (LRA) combinations.
Participant preference for LRA combinations, quantitatively assessed using a pill diary with Likert scales 1-5 (higher scores meaning better outcome)
Time frame: At 0 hours, 24 hours and 7 days
Phase I: Participant quality of life during combination LRA treatment
To evaluate qualitative patient reported outcomes of quality of life assessed by semi-structured interviews
Time frame: Baseline, and at timepoint 7 days
Phase I: Plasma HIV-RNA kinetics during interventional treatment
Change in plasma HIV-RNA between and within arms
Time frame: At time points 6 hours, 24 hours and 7 days compared to baseline
Phase I: Change of the functionality of immune cells
The change of the functionality of innate and adaptive immune cell subpopulations, specifically total T cells and HIV specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as well as HIV specific antibody profiles, between and within the groups
Time frame: At 7 days, compared to baseline
Phase I: Change of the phenotype of immune cells
The change of the phenotype of innate and adaptive immune cell subpopulations, specifically total T cells and HIV specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as well as HIV specific antibody profiles, between and within the groups
Time frame: At 7 days, compared to baseline
Phase I: Pharmacokinetics of LRA compounds
Plasmaconcentrations Cmax will be measured using validated methods and related to the primary endpoint
Time frame: At time points 2 hours, 6 hours, 24 hours and 7 days compared to baseline
Phase I: Pharmacokinetics of LRA compounds
Plasmaconcentrations Cthrough will be measured using validated methods and related to the primary endpoint
Time frame: At time points 2 hours, 6 hours, 24 hours and 7 days compared to baseline
Phase I: Drug plasma levels of ART
Plasma concentrations Cmax of ART (antiretroviral therapy) will be measured using validated methods and related to LRA compounds
Time frame: At time points 0 hours, 6 hours, 24 hours and 7 days
Phase I: Drug plasma levels of ART
Description: Plasma concentrations Cthrough of ART (antiretroviral therapy) will be measured using validated methods and related to LRA compounds
Time frame: At baseline and at time points 6 hours, 24 hours and 7 days
Phase I: Ex vivo/ In vivo correlation of reservoir reactivation
The correlation between ex vivo and in vivo fold change in cell-associated HIV-RNA
Time frame: From time points baseline to 24 hours
Phase II: Participant quality of life during LRA combination treatment.
To evaluate qualitative patient reported outcomes of quality of life assessed by semi-structured interviews
Time frame: At baseline and timepoint 4 weeks
Phase II: Plasma HIV-RNA kinetics during interventional treatment
Change in plasma HIV-RNA absolute copies/mL within groups
Time frame: At timepoints 24 hours, 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and 4 weeks compared to baseline
Phase II: functionality of innate and adaptive immune cells
The change of the functionality of innate and adaptive immune cell subpopulations, specifically total T cells and HIV specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as well as HIV specific antibody profiles, between and within the groups
Time frame: At time points 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and 4 weeks compared to baseline
Phase II: Phenotype of innate and adaptive immune cells
The change of the phenotype of innate and adaptive immune cell subpopulations, specifically total T cells and HIV specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells as well as HIV specific antibody
Time frame: At time points 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and 4 weeks compared to baseline
Phase II: Pharmacokinetics LRA compounds
Plasmaconcentrations Cmax will be measured using validated methods and related to the primary endpoint
Time frame: At time points 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and 4 weeks compared to baseline
Phase II: Pharmacokinetics of LRA compounds
Plasmaconcentrations Cthrough will be measured using validated methods and related to the primary endpoint
Time frame: At time points 1week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and 4 weeks compared to baseline
Phase II: Drug plasma levels of ART
Plasma concentrations Cmax of ART will be measured using validated methods. The pharmacokinetic profiles ART will be assessed in relation to the primary endpoint and LRA compounds
Time frame: At time points 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks and 4 weeks
Phase II: Drug plasma levels of ART
Description: Plasma concentrations Cthrough of ART will be measured using validated methods. The pharmacokinetic profiles ART will be assessed in relation to the primary endpoint and LRA compounds
Time frame: At time points 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks, 4 weeks
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