Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
32 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2019-09-02
2022-11-30
Brief Summary
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Sparse PK data will be obtained opportunistically from participants in the 'special populations' defined above who are receiving ATV as part of their routine clinical care. Subjects will be identified from clinics including the Joint Clinical Research Center (JCRC) and Infectious Diseases Institute (IDI), Kampala, and from sites including Groote Schuur Hospital and Gugulethu Community Health Centre, Cape Town. The ATV/r data from "special populations" will enable validation and refinement of both the PBPK model (WP1) and the pop-PK models (WP4) of the VirTUAL consortium.
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Detailed Description
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The results from this protocol (VirTUAL WP5) will be considered in the context of the full research programme. This can be summarised as follows:
Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modelling will be developed to understand bPI and RIF Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs), identifying potential dosing strategies to overcome these in adults and special populations (WP1). This data will inform clinical pharmacokinetic studies exploring the necessary dose escalation of ATV/r, including in the context of high-dose RIF, performed in Kampala (WP2). Intracellular pharmacokinetics will further characterise the DDI (WP3). PBPK and population pharmacokinetics (pop-PK) modelling will be integrated enabling extrapolation to special populations (WP4), and sparse data collection from such populations receiving different combinations of second-line ART and/or TB treatment in Kampala and Cape Town will validate and refine these models (WP5). Capacity building focussing on equipping African scientists with the tools to efficiently define drug dosing in complex populations (WP6), communication and stakeholder engagement (WP7) will increase the application of this methodology to other priority research into pharmacokinetics in special populations.
This protocol describes the sparse pharmacokinetic sampling component which forms Workpackage 5 (WP5) of this research programme. The dose-escalation study (WP2) is an interventional trial which will be conducted in 28 healthy, virologically suppressed volunteers who are on ATV-based second-line ART, are aged over 18, have a normal BMI and are not pregnant or breastfeeding, and which will take place at JCRC, Kampala, Uganda. This study is anticipated to commence in mid-2019, and will explore in detail the changes in pharmacokinetics of ATV/r in both plasma and within cells which take place when rifampicin is co-administered, and will evaluate the necessary dose adjustment which is required to concurrently administer ATV/r with rifampicin-based TB treatment. WP2 will generate intensive data on these 28 well characterized individuals who do not have 'special' characteristics. However, there is a paucity of data on ATV/r disposition in patients who are typically excluded from clinical trials, and therefore the observational data from WP5 will be collected from individuals who fall into the listed categories of special populations and who are being treated with ATV/r for their own health. Data from either WP2 or WP5 alone will be amenable to pharmacometric analysis and bring value, but the combined modelling approach using both sets of data in a combined model will allow the most comprehensive evaluation of ATV/r disposition in the wider population, and will enable projections of dosing recommendations for the special populations who require concurrent treatment for TB whilst receiving ATV/r-based ART.
Individuals will be identified at routine clinic appointments. They (or their guardians) will be asked to keep a detailed record of dosing times for three to five days prior to their study appointment at which sampling will be performed. If they take their medication in the morning, they will be asked to bring the medication to clinic for observation of dosing.
Repeat sampling at subsequent appointments will enable assessment of both between and within-individual variability, for example during periods of rapid childhood growth or during pregnancy and transition back to non-pregnant physiological state.
It is aimed to obtain 20 sparse PK profiles in each of the following groups (pregnant, child \<5, child 6-11, adolescent 12-18, obese (BMI \>30 Kg/m2), malnourished (BMI \<18.5 Kg/m2)), with each individual contributing 4 samples per PK visit, and possibly followed up longitudinally during the study (each individual may attend for a maximum of three study visits). Therefore there will be between 7 (6 participants being sampled on 3 occasions and a final participant sampled on 2 occasions) and 20 (if each participant was only sampled on a single occasion) individual participants per group to generate the 20 sampling 'occasions', with a total number of participants across the six groups included in the study of between 42 and 120.
This will provide an essential clinical dataset to inform the pop-PK modelling approach and validate the PBPK simulations, describing exposure and pharmacokinetic variability in the populations of interest. The data from this work package will be pooled with the data from the study in volunteers and jointly analysed using PK modelling. Differences in the PK parameters for each of the groups will be investigated.
There exist no peer-reviewed published data regarding the transfer of ATV/r into breast milk. Therefore, among women who are enrolled during pregnancy and followed into the postpartum phase, paired breast milk samples will be obtained at the same time as plasma samples.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Children <5 years
Children under the age of 5 years who are receiving atazanavir as part of clinical care
Atazanavir 250 mg / ritonavir 80 mg
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care. This dose of 250/ 80 is for participants weighing between 15 and 25 Kg
Children 6-11
Children aged 6-11 years who are receiving atazanavir as part of clinical care
Atazanavir 250 mg / ritonavir 80 mg
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care. This dose of 250/ 80 is for participants weighing between 15 and 25 Kg
Adolescents 12-17
Adolescents aged 12-17 years who are receiving atazanavir as part of clinical care
Atazanavir 300mg/ Ritonavir 100 mg once daily
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care
Pregnant women
Women who are at least 20 weeks gestation, who are receiving atazanavir as part of clinical care
Atazanavir 300mg/ Ritonavir 100 mg once daily
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care
BMI < 18.5
Adults with a BMI of \<18.5 kg/m2 who are receiving atazanavir as part of clinical care
Atazanavir 300mg/ Ritonavir 100 mg once daily
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care
BMI >30
Adults with a BMI of \>30 kg/m2 who are receiving atazanavir as part of clinical care
Atazanavir 300mg/ Ritonavir 100 mg once daily
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care
Interventions
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Atazanavir 300mg/ Ritonavir 100 mg once daily
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care
Atazanavir 250 mg / ritonavir 80 mg
There is no intervention in this study - participants will all be receiving atazanavir (usually boosted with ritonavir) as part of their routine clinical care. This dose of 250/ 80 is for participants weighing between 15 and 25 Kg
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. In a child aged ≥7 years (South Africa) or aged ≥8 years (Uganda), evidence of assent to participate
3. Participants who are willing and able to comply with scheduled visits, laboratory tests, and other study procedures.
4. HIV-infected, receiving ATV-based ART treatment OR HIV-infected receiving second-line ART with concurrent rifamycin-based TB treatment
5. Participant is within one of the target populations:
1. Pregnant (\>20 weeks)
2. Body mass index \>30 or \<18.5 Kg/m2
3. Child or adolescent aged \<18 years
Exclusion Criteria
2. Dissent from a minor
3. For pregnant women in Uganda, where the husband is reasonably involved, paternal objection
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Makerere University
OTHER
Joint Clinical Research Centre- Kampala
UNKNOWN
Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation
OTHER
University of Cape Town
OTHER
European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP) - funder
UNKNOWN
University of Liverpool
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Catriona Waitt
Senior Lecturer in Clinical Pharmacology
Locations
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Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation
Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
University of Cape Town
Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Infectious Diseases Institute
Kampala, , Uganda
Joint Clinical Research Centre
Kampala, , Uganda
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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VirTUAL WP5
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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