Using Less Neurotoxic Drugs in Patients With HAND (MARAND-X)

NCT ID: NCT03163277

Last Updated: 2020-11-06

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

38 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-05-15

Study Completion Date

2020-06-30

Brief Summary

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Neurocognitive disorders are still highly prevalent in the HAART era; despite a dramatic reduction in dementia cases, 15-50% of patients may develop mild or asymptomatic neurocognitive disorders (HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders, HAND).

Among other hypothesis neurotoxicity of antiretrovirals has been postulated but its impact is unknown.

Our hypothesis is that using drugs with reduced in vitro neurotoxicity may improve cognition in HIV-positive patients withHAND.

76 patients with HAND will be randomized to either continue their treatment or switch to emtricitabine, darunavir/cobicistat, maraviroc. Patients will be re-tested 6 months later.

Detailed Description

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Scientific Rationale for Study / Scientific Study Objectives:

Neurocognitive disorders are still highly prevalent in the HAART era; despite a dramatic reduction in dementia cases, 15-50% of patients may develop mild or asymptomatic neurocognitive disorders (HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders, HAND). It should be highlighted that patients presenting no abnormalities in everyday living activities (asymptomatic neurocognitive disorders, ANI) are at higher risk of worse results in performance-based tests, adherence-based measures and they show a significant risk of progressing to more severe forms of impairment. Excluding significantly confounding comorbidities, several factors have been associated with this neurocognitive decline including a low nadir CD4+ T-lymphocyte count, a high HIV DNA, a lower compartmental viral control, a lower concentration/penetration effectiveness score, a lower efficacy in macrophage-derived cells and antiretroviral-generated neuronal toxicity. However several data point out that vascular abnormalities, very common in HIV-positive patients, may deeply influence neurocognitive disorders development and severity: of note, intima media thickness, a well recognized proxy of systemic atherosclerosis, was associated with HAND.

In case of HAND diagnosis, the only recommended approach is to optimize treatment according to plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) resistance tests; no strategy is currently suggested in case of suppressed plasma and CSF HIV RNA or in case of low level CSF HIV RNA (without evidence of genotypic resistance). It has been postulated that antiretrovirals may have neurotoxic effects through different mechanisms and such effects might become evident once the beneficial effect of HIV RNA suppression vanishes. Available data suggest that, in vitro, the drugs associated with the least neurotoxic effect were emtricitabine, tenofovir, darunavir and maraviroc. Furthermore, several pieces of evidence and a small randomized trial suggest that maraviroc, in HAART-treated subjects may have beneficial effects in terms of improved neurocognitive function, reduced CSF inflammatory biomarkers and improved MRI markers of neuronal integrity.

No study has so far investigated the effect of using drugs with a low neurotoxic profile in HAART-treated patients with HAND.

Primary objective of the study is the variation in neurocognitive tests (global deficit score), 6 months after treatment switch while secondary objectives include the improvement in other biomarkers of neuronal and vascular integrity.

Methods:

Study Design: Randomized, controlled, pilot study. HIV-positive patients that fulfill the inclusion criteria and that sign the informed consent will be enrolled. Patients will be randomized 1:1 (block randomization) to either continue their treatment or to switch to once-daily emtricitabine (200 mg) plus darunavir/cobicistat (800/150 mg) plus maraviroc (300 mg). A lumbar puncture will be performed 6 months after treatment switch.

Number of Patients: 76 (38 per arm)

Conditions

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Hiv Neurocognitive Dysfunction

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Standard of care

Continue current antiretroviral regimen

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Reduced Neurotoxicity Arm

Emtricitabine plus darunavir/cobicistat plus maraviroc

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

emtricitabine, darunavir/cobicistat, maraviroc

Intervention Type DRUG

Treatment change

Interventions

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emtricitabine, darunavir/cobicistat, maraviroc

Treatment change

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Age above \>18 years;
* Confirmed HIV-positivity;
* Diagnosed with HAND according to the Frascati Criteria;
* On combination antiretroviral treatment;
* No evidence of major resistance associated mutations on previous plasma or CSF samples;
* Plasma HIV RNA \<50 copies/mL;
* CSF HIV RNA \<50 copies/mL;
* R5-tropic virus as detected by a genotype or phenotype based test before starting HAART or genotype-based test performed on HIV DNA in the previous 12 months;

Exclusion Criteria

* the use of drugs having major drug-to-drug interaction with maraviroc (for instance rifampicin);
* the use of efavirenz- or darunavir-containing regimens at baseline;
* confounding comorbidities that may influence or affect the diagnosis of HAND including developmental disability, history of traumatic brain injury or of cerebrovascular accident;
* a previous diagnosis of central nervous system opportunistic, autoimmune, neurodegenerative or neoplastic disease;
* severe untreated depression;
* active alcohol or recreational substance abuse (in the previous 3 months);
* not fluent in Italian or unable to complete the neurocognitive tests.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Giovanni Di Perri

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Giovanni Di Perri

Full Professore of Infectious Diseases

Responsibility Role SPONSOR_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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University of Torino

Torino, , Italy

Site Status

Countries

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Italy

References

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Stroffolini G, Lazzaro A, Barco A, Pirriatore V, Vai D, Giaccone C, Nigra M, Atzori C, Trunfio M, Bonora S, Di Perri G G, Calcagno A. Changes in Cerebrospinal Fluid, Liver and Intima-media-thickness Biomarkers in Patients with HIV-associated Neurocognitive Disorders Randomized to a Less Neurotoxic Treatment Regimen. J Neuroimmune Pharmacol. 2023 Dec;18(4):551-562. doi: 10.1007/s11481-023-10086-7. Epub 2023 Oct 31.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 37906406 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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MARAND-X

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id