Department of Global HIV, Hepatitis and Sexually Transmitted Infections Programmes, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2022 Jul;25 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):e25912. doi: 10.1002/jia2.25912.
Historical approaches to clinical development of novel therapeutics for treatment and prevention of HIV have led to unacceptable delays in the generation of data to support optimal antiretroviral drug use in pregnancy. Over the last 5 years, multiple stakeholders have voiced their concerns around the exclusion of pregnant women from drug trials, and some progress has been made to consolidate principles and forge consensus. Building on ongoing efforts, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Maternal Paediatric Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trials Network (IMPAACT) convened a technical consultation designed to move the discussion from theory to practice.
Accelerating the inclusion of pregnant women in pre-licensure clinical trials, with a goal to have pharmacokinetics (PK) and preliminary safety data for all new HIV agents in pregnancy available at the time of drug approval, requires: (1) performing non-clinical developmental and reproductive toxicology studies early in drug development for all new HIV agents; (2) recognizing and acting on the central role of women of childbearing potential affected by HIV through the research being conducted and the dissemination of associated results; (3) enrolling pregnant women in studies to specifically determine pregnancy PK and preliminary safety, as soon as late non-clinical studies are completed with no negative signals, for all new HIV agents that have demonstrated preliminary evidence of safety and efficacy from phase 2 trials; (4) investigating adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes through dedicated pregnancy safety studies for all new priority HIV agents; and (5) expanding active surveillance of drug safety in pregnancy for rare events, such as birth defects. Strategic actions to pursue include developing tools and resources to support designing and implementing studies among pregnant and breastfeeding women, identifying and promoting modifications of the regulatory framework that are supportive of systematic ethical investigation of new drugs in pregnancy, coordinating surveillance efforts, mobilizing key stakeholders and promoting transparency and accountability for all involved.
With more than 19 million women living with HIV worldwide, ensuring greater inclusion of pregnant women in research on novel therapeutics is a priority to support drug optimization and effective introduction of innovations for treatment and prevention of HIV.
历史上针对新型治疗药物的临床开发方法,用于治疗和预防 HIV,导致数据的产生无法满足支持妊娠期最佳抗逆转录病毒药物使用的需求,从而出现了不可接受的延迟。在过去的 5 年中,多个利益相关者对将孕妇排除在药物试验之外表示关注,并且已经取得了一些进展来整合原则并达成共识。在持续努力的基础上,世界卫生组织(WHO)和国际母婴青少年艾滋病临床试验网络(IMPAACT)召开了一次技术咨询会议,旨在将讨论从理论付诸实践。
为了在药物批准时获得所有新 HIV 药物在妊娠中的药代动力学(PK)和初步安全性数据,加速将孕妇纳入上市前临床试验,需要:(1)在新药开发的早期进行非临床发育和生殖毒性研究;(2)通过正在进行的研究和相关结果的传播,认识到并发挥具有生育能力的受 HIV 影响的妇女的核心作用;(3)一旦完成晚期非临床研究且没有负面信号,尽快为所有已显示出从 2 期试验中初步安全性和疗效的新 HIV 药物招募孕妇参加专门确定妊娠 PK 和初步安全性的研究;(4)通过所有新的优先 HIV 药物的专门妊娠安全性研究,调查不良妊娠和出生结局;(5)扩大对妊娠期间药物安全性的主动监测,以发现罕见事件,如出生缺陷。需要采取的战略行动包括开发工具和资源,以支持设计和实施孕妇和哺乳期妇女的研究,确定和促进支持系统地对妊娠中的新药进行伦理研究的监管框架的修改,协调监测工作,动员主要利益相关者并提高透明度和问责制。
全球有超过 1900 万妇女感染了 HIV,确保更多的孕妇参与新型治疗药物的研究是一个优先事项,以支持药物优化和有效引入治疗和预防 HIV 的创新。