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A Randomized, Controlled, Trial of Short Cycle Intermittent Compared to Continuous Antiretroviral Therapy for the Treatment of HIV Infection in Uganda.

Authors :
Reynolds, Steven J.
Kityo, Cissy
Hallahan, Claire W.
Kabuye, Geoffrey
Atwiine, Diana
Mbamanya, Frank
Ssali, Francis
Dewar, Robin
Daucher, Marybeth
Davey Jr., Richard T.
Mugyenyi, Peter
Fauci, Anthony S.
Quinn, Thomas C.
Dybul, Mark R.
Source :
PLoS ONE; 2010, Vol. 5 Issue 4, p1-8, 8p, 1 Diagram, 3 Charts, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Background: Short cycle treatment interruption could reduce toxicity and drug costs and contribute to further expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART) programs. Methods: A 72 week, non-inferiority trial enrolled one hundred forty six HIV positive persons receiving ART (CD4+ cell count ≥125 cells/mm<superscript>3</superscript> and HIV RNA plasma levels <50 copies/ml) in one of three arms: continuous, 7 days on/7 days off and 5 days on/2 days off treatment. Primary endpoint was ART treatment failure determined by plasma HIV RNA level, CD4+ cell count decrease, death attributed to study participation, or opportunistic infection. Results: Following enrollment of 32 participants, the 7 days on/7 days off arm was closed because of a failure rate of 31%. Six of 52 (11.5%) participants in the 5 days on/2 days off arm failed. Five had virologic failure and one participant had immunologic failure. Eleven of 51 (21.6%) participants in the continuous treatment arm failed. Nine had virologic failure with 1 death (lactic acidosis) and 1 clinical failure (extra-pulmonary TB). The upper 97.5% confidence boundary for the difference between the percent of non-failures in the 5 days on/2 days off arm (88.5% non-failure) compared to continuous treatment (78.4% non failure) was 4.8% which is well within the preset non-inferiority margin of 15%. No significant difference was found in time to failure in the 2 study arms (p = 0.39). Conclusions: Short cycle 5 days on/2 days off intermittent ART was at least as effective as continuous therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
5
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
52829187
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010307