5
Drugs No Better than 3 for Treatment of Primary HIV Infection
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SUMMARY:
An intensive antiretroviral therapy
(ART) regimen consisting of 5 drugs from 4 different classes
did not lead to better outcomes after 1 year than a standard
3-drug regimen started during acute or early HIV infection,
according to study data presented at the 18th Conference on
Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI
2011) last week in Boston. |
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By
Paul Dalton
There is
growing interest in the benefits of treating HIV during the earliest
phases of infection. This interest arises from observations of profound
immune system injury during these early phases. Some researchers hypothesize
that initiating ART
within the first 6 months to a year after infection would lead to less
immune depletion and better clinical outcomes.
Typical HIV drug regimens contain 3 drugs, including 2 nucleoside/nucleotide
reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and a more potent agent such
as a protease inhibitor or a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
(NNRTI). While 3-drug ART is largely successful, there is ongoing interest
in ways to improve HIV treatment.
In an oral presentation at CROI, Martin Markowitz of the Aaron Diamond
Research Center in New York City presented 48-week results from a study
comparing a standard 3-drug ART regimen to an experimental 5-drug combination
in people infected with HIV less than 1 year and starting treatment
for the first time.
Participants were randomly assigned to take either tenofovir/emtricitabine
(Truvada) plus either boosted atazanavir
(Reyataz) or boosted darunavir
(Prezista), or else the same 3 drugs plus the integrase inhibitor
raltegravir
(Isentress) and the CCR5 blocker maraviroc
(Selzentry).
A total
of 40 people enrolled in the study, 26 in the 5-drug arm and 14 in the
3-drug arm; 3 people in each arm dropped out, leaving 23 in the 5-drug
arm and 11 in the 3-drug arm to be evaluated.
All participants
were men and the average age was around 40 years. About 25% were considered
to be in the acute phase of HIV infection, meaning they presented with
very high viral loads and had not yet developed HIV antibodies.
Results
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Overall
efficacy in an intent-to-treat analysis was 78.6% for the 3-drug
arm vs 76.9% for the 5-drug arm, not a statistically significant
difference. |
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After
48 weeks, everyone in the 3-drug arm had undetectable viral load,
as did 20 of 23 people in the 5-drug arm. |
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HIV
viral load dropped more quickly in the 5-drug arm, with the difference
becoming statistically significant after 12 weeks; this is consistent
with other research showing that raltegravir led to more rapid viral
load decline compared to other antiretrovirals. |
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By
week 16, however, viral loads were similar between the 2 groups. |
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All
study participants except 1 had detectable HIV using more sensitive
viral load tests. |
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No
differences between the groups were seen with intensive virological
testing, including single cell assays, proviral DNA, and cell-associated
HIV RNA. |
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CD4
T-cell counts increased by an average of 300 cells/mm3 in both arms. |
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There
were no clinically meaningful differences between the arms in other
immunologic parameters, including T-cell subsets and various markers
of inflammation. |
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Participants
in both arms were more than 95% adherent to their assigned regimen,
according to both self-reporting and random drug level sampling.
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Markowitz
concluded that adding raltegravir and maraviroc to a standard 3-drug
ART regimen failed to provide any additional benefit in either virological
or immunological parameters.
One interesting
aspect of this study yet to be presented is results from gastrointestinal
(GI) biopsies performed on all participants after 60 weeks. Immunologists
have noted a profound loss of T-cells in the GI tract during early HIV
infection, and some researchers have speculated that raltegravir and
maraviroc might provide extra protection against this GI immune injury.
While this study failed to show a difference between a 5-drug versus
a 3-drug ART combination after 48 weeks, further follow up is planned
through 96 weeks. Promisingly, this study demonstrated that people newly
infected with HIV could use either regimen successfully.
Investigator
affiliations: Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Ctr, Rockefeller University,
New York, NY; Rockefeller University, New York, NY; Swedish Inst for
Infectious Disease Control and Karolinska Institute, Solna, Sweden.
3/11/11
Reference
M
Markowitz, T Evering, M Caskey, and others. A Randomized Open-label
Trial of 5-Drug vs 3-Drug Standard PI-based cART Initiated during Acute
and Early HIV-1 Infection: 48-Week Results. 18th Conference on Retroviruses
and Opportunistic Infections (CROI 2011). Boston. February 27-March
2, 2011. Abstract
148LB.