Kuhn Louise, Strehlau Renate, Shiau Stephanie, Patel Faeezah, Shen Yanhan, Technau Karl-Günter, Burke Megan, Sherman Gayle, Coovadia Ashraf, Aldrovandi Grace M, Hazra Rohan, Tsai Wei-Yann, Tiemessen Caroline T, Abrams Elaine J
Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center, Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, 630 W 168th Street, New York, NY 10032, United States.
Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, United States.
EClinicalMedicine. 2020 Jan 7;18:100241. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2019.100241. eCollection 2020 Jan.
Studies in adults and children suggested that starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) soon after infection positively influences early events in HIV infection raising the possibility that remission may be achieved in some.
We designed an analytic treatment interruption (ATI) trial to test the hypothesis that a sizable minority of HIV-infected neonates who initiated ART <14 days of birth and maintained on ART would be able to maintain viral suppression when ART was withdrawn. To yield the target cohort for this trial, 73 HIV-infected neonates identified at one hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa, were initiated on ART <14 days of birth and maintained on ART tracking viral load (VL) decline and immune recovery (clinicaltrials.gov # NCT02431975).
Three HIV-infected infants (4.1%) died and nine (12.3%) were lost to follow-up before 48 weeks of age. Of those surviving on study, 52.5% attained and sustained VL <50 copies/ml and half of these sustained CD4+ -cell percentage >30% which were the primary entry criteria for the ATI trial. Proportions achieving ATI eligibility criteria were similar in the 46 infants starting ART <48 h (19.6%) to 27 infants starting 2-14 days (25.9%) ( = 0.567).
Very early ART on its own, using regimens available when the trial was designed, is insufficient to attain minimum entry criteria needed to justify our trial of ART interruption. Decisions about how quickly to start ART should be based on optimizing standard clinical outcomes rather than with the expectation that remission can be attained.
NICHD/NIAID (U01HD080441), South African Research Chairs Initiative of DST and NRF (South Africa).
针对成人和儿童的研究表明,感染后尽早开始抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)对HIV感染的早期事件有积极影响,这增加了部分患者可能实现缓解的可能性。
我们设计了一项分析性治疗中断(ATI)试验,以检验以下假设:相当一部分在出生后<14天开始接受ART并持续接受ART治疗的HIV感染新生儿,在停止ART后能够维持病毒抑制。为了获得该试验的目标队列,在南非约翰内斯堡的一家医院确定的73名HIV感染新生儿在出生后<14天开始接受ART治疗,并持续接受ART治疗,同时跟踪病毒载量(VL)下降和免疫恢复情况(clinicaltrials.gov # NCT02431975)。
3名HIV感染婴儿(4.1%)在48周龄前死亡,9名(12.3%)失访。在研究中存活的婴儿中,52.5%达到并维持VL<50拷贝/毫升,其中一半维持CD4 +细胞百分比>30%,这是ATI试验的主要入选标准。在46名在<48小时开始ART治疗的婴儿中,达到ATI入选标准的比例(19.6%)与27名在2 - 14天开始治疗的婴儿(25.9%)相似(P = 0.567)。
仅使用试验设计时可用的方案进行极早期ART治疗,不足以达到证明我们的ART中断试验合理所需的最低入选标准。关于何时开始ART治疗的决策应基于优化标准临床结果,而不是期望实现缓解。
美国国立儿童健康与人类发展研究所/美国国立过敏与传染病研究所(U01HD080441),南非科学技术部和国家研究基金会的南非研究主席倡议(南非)。