1. Effects of Prednisolone on Disease Progression in Antiretroviral-Untreated HIV Infection: A 2-Year Randomized, Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial.
- Author
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Kasang, Christa, Kalluvya, Samuel, Majinge, Charles, Kongola, Gilbert, Mlewa, Mathias, Massawe, Irene, Kabyemera, Rogatus, Magambo, Kinanga, Ulmer, Albrecht, Klinker, Hartwig, Gschmack, Eva, Horn, Anne, Koutsilieri, Eleni, Preiser, Wolfgang, Hofmann, Daniela, Hain, Johannes, Müller, Andreas, Dölken, Lars, Weissbrich, Benedikt, and Rethwilm, Axel
- Subjects
PREDNISOLONE ,PHARMACODYNAMICS ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,HIV infections ,THERAPEUTICS ,DISEASE progression ,STATISTICAL correlation ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: HIV-disease progression correlates with immune activation. Here we investigated whether corticosteroid treatment can attenuate HIV disease progression in antiretroviral-untreated patients. Methods: Double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial including 326 HIV-patients in a resource-limited setting in Tanzania (clinicaltrials.gov NCT01299948). Inclusion criteria were a CD4 count above 300 cells/μl, the absence of AIDS-defining symptoms and an ART-naïve therapy status. Study participants received 5 mg prednisolone per day or placebo for 2 years. Primary endpoint was time to progression to an AIDS-defining condition or to a CD4-count below 200 cells/μl. Results: No significant change in progression towards the primary endpoint was observed in the intent-to-treat (ITT) analysis (19 cases with prednisolone versus 28 cases with placebo, p = 0.1407). In a per-protocol (PP)-analysis, 13 versus 24 study participants progressed to the primary study endpoint (p = 0.0741). Secondary endpoints: Prednisolone-treatment decreased immune activation (sCD14, suPAR, CD38/HLA-DR/CD8+) and increased CD4-counts (+77.42 ± 5.70 cells/μl compared to -37.42 ± 10.77 cells/μl under placebo, p < 0.0001). Treatment with prednisolone was associated with a 3.2-fold increase in HIV viral load (p < 0.0001). In a post-hoc analysis stratifying for sex, females treated with prednisolone progressed significantly slower to the primary study endpoint than females treated with placebo (ITT-analysis: 11 versus 21 cases, p = 0.0567; PP-analysis: 5 versus 18 cases, p = 0.0051): No changes in disease progression were observed in men. Conclusions: This study could not detect any significant effects of prednisolone on disease progression in antiretroviral-untreated HIV infection within the intent-to-treat population. However, significant effects were observed on CD4 counts, immune activation and HIV viral load. This study contributes to a better understanding of the role of immune activation in the pathogenesis of HIV infection. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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