Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
610

Summary

Conditions
HIV Infections
Type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 4
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: A third arm has been incorporated using a multi-arm, multi-stage (MAMS) design. This design allows for the 2-arm study (DTG+DRV/r vs DRV/r+2NRTI) to continue accrual while preparation of the new arm (DTG+2NRTI) is begun in parallel. Once that arm is ready, accrual to it begins and the study switches to the second stage. All participants accrued to Arm 1 and 2 throughout the trial are contemporaneous and can be compared, while the subjects accrued to Arm 3 are compared only to their contemporaries in Arms 1 and 2. The size of Arm 3 is sufficient to allow adequate power comparisons, and stage effects are minimized while non-contemporaneous control data are not required.Masking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Consenting participants will be screened and within 45 days randomly allocated to receive either dolutegravir and darunavir/ritonavir, dolutegravir and 2 prespecified NRTIs or the SOC regimen. Participants will be seen four weeks after their randomisation (week 0) visit and then at weeks 12, 24, 48 ...

Consenting participants will be screened and within 45 days randomly allocated to receive either dolutegravir and darunavir/ritonavir, dolutegravir and 2 prespecified NRTIs or the SOC regimen. Participants will be seen four weeks after their randomisation (week 0) visit and then at weeks 12, 24, 48 and 96. Consenting participants will have storage samples collected and cryopreserved at their week 0, 48 & 96 visits. This repository will be used in future for central baseline resistance testing, pharmacogenomic testing (separate consent required) and has inherent value for later studies of HIV pathogenesis. A 1-time PK sample will be collected at week four for future testing and any participants failing therapy at 24 weeks will have a plasma sample stored for future genotypic resistance testing. A number of secondary outcomes will be considered in order to compare the performance of the two study treatment regimens. Secondary analyses will focus on virological, immunological, safety, antiretroviral treatment change and medication adherence. A comparison of costs and estimates of cost-effectiveness for the randomised comparison will be a critical component of this study. ART costs will be assessed across study arms. Health-care utilisation will be self-reported and then used to estimate costs. Safety data, viral loads and quality of life data will also be analysed. The open label nature of the study allows routine care to be undertaken and the use of objective endpoints limit potential bias. The study has well defined and integrated clinical data collection and patient management systems that have been shown to be effective in a wide range of clinical settings. The choice of NRTIs in the SoC regimen is based on clinical judgement and may be guided by resistance testing if locally available, while those used with dolutegravir are predetermined (tenofovir and lamivudine or emtricitabine). The NRTIs are not provided via the study. At the end of 96 weeks (completion of the protocol) study drug can be offered to all participants for a further 48 weeks as informed by the 48-week study results and clinical judgement. After 144 weeks study drug will no longer be available and composition of the participant's post-study regimen will be the clinician's decision.'

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03017872
Collaborators
  • UNITAID
  • National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
  • National Health and Medical Research Council, Australia
  • ViiV Healthcare
  • Janssen Pharmaceutica
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Mark Polizzotto, MD Kirby Institute