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Phase 4 Completed N=50 Randomized Treatment

Switch to Unboosted Atazanavir With Tenofovir Study

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01351740 ↗
Enrolled (actual)
50
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Jul 2018
Primary outcomePrimary: Proportions of Subjects Experiencing Virologic Failure by Randomized Treatment Arm — 2; 6 Participants
◆ Published Evidence
Emerging
1citation · ~0 / year
Efficacy and safety of "unboosting" atazanavir in a randomized controlled trial among HIV-infected patients receiving tenofovir DF.
HIV clinical trials · 2017 · High-confidence link

Summary

A drug-drug interaction between the anti-HIV drugs tenofovir DF (TDF) and atazanavir (ATZ) results in lower ATZ plasma levels when the drugs are given together, particularly in patients not taking ritonavir to boost ATZ levels. Lower plasma drug levels may make the anti-HIV regimen less effective in controlling the HIV virus levels in the blood. For this reason, current treatment guidelines recommend that ATZ always be boosted with ritonavir in regimens also containing TDF. However, withdrawal of ritonavir is often desirable given the tolerability and toxicity issues with this agent, even at the low dose (100 mg daily) used to boost ATZ. For example, ritonavir can cause stomach upset, nausea, diarrhea, high cholesterol levels, and liver enzyme abnormalities. However, there is evidence that plasma ATZ levels may not predict treatment success on unboosted ATZ regimens, particularly among people whose plasma HIV virus is already under control and unboosted ATZ is being used as a maintenance strategy. In the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS Drug Treatment Program (DTP), nearly 100 patients originally treated with ritonavir-boosted ATZ + TDF (+ FTC or 3TC) are receiving successful maintenance therapy with unboosted ATZ and the same TDF-based backbone. The study will examine the hypothesis that switching to maintenance therapy with unboosted ATZ 400mg daily will have similar 48-week virologic efficacy to continuing ATZ/ritonavir 300/100mg daily among HIV-infected adults with stable viral load suppression on regimens comprising ATZ/ritonavir 300/100mg daily with TDF plus either FTC or 3TC, despite potentially lower ATZ trough levels with the unboosted regimen. In other words, patients whose HIV viral load is undetectable while receiving TDF (+FTC or 3TC) and ATZ/ritonavir will continue to maintain an undetectable viral load after switching to unboosted ATZ without ritonavir, in the same proportions as those continuing on their boosted ATZ/ritonavir regimen.

Linked Publications

  • Efficacy and safety of "unboosting" atazanavir in a randomized controlled trial among HIV-infected patients receiving tenofovir DF.
    HIV clinical trials · 2017 · 1 citation · High-confidence link

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Proportions of Subjects Experiencing Virologic Failure by Randomized Treatment Arm
SECONDARY
Proportions of Subjects in Each Randomized Treatment Arm With Atazanavir Trough Levels Below 150ng/mL
14; 3
SECONDARY
Proportion of Subjects Experiencing Virologic Failure by Results of 1-month TDM
SECONDARY
Proportions of Subjects Experiencing Virologic Failure by Randomized Treatment Arm
SECONDARY
Proportion of Subjects Experiencing Virologic Failure by Results of 1-month TDM
SECONDARY
CD4 Cell Count Changes (Absolute and Fraction)
SECONDARY
Safety (Clinical and Laboratory Adverse Events)
SECONDARY
Total Serum Bilirubin Levels
SECONDARY
Metabolic Parameters
SECONDARY
Quality of Life as Assessed by MOS-HIV

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • HIV infected adults at least 19 years of age
  • Willing and able to provide informed consent to study participation
  • Currently receiving a regimen including atazanavir 300mg/ritonavir 100mg daily with either tenofovir/emtricitabine (FTC) or tenofovir/lamivudine (3TC), for at least 3 months
  • Plasma viral load (VL) <40 copies/mL for at least 2 consecutive measurements including the screening value, and < 150 copies/mL continuously for at least 3 months prior to screening
  • Current regimen is first antiretroviral regimen, or if not first regimen, no evidence of resistance to any nucleosides (NRTIs) or protease inhibitors (PIs) on previous resistance tests
  • Any CD4

Exclusion Criteria

  • Clinically significant intolerance or toxicity with current regimen precluding regimen continuation (e.g. intolerance/toxicity to ritonavir necessitating ritonavir discontinuation)
  • pregnancy or breast-feeding
  • antiretroviral regimen including any nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (nevirapine, efavirenz, or etravirine)
  • antiretroviral regimen including any protease inhibitor other than atazanavir and ritonavir
  • concomitant treatment with proton pump inhibitors, rifampin, St. John's wort, or garlic supplements. (Antacids and H2 receptor antagonists will be allowed provided their dosing is separated from atazanavir administration by at least 2 and 10 hours, respectively).
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01351740) and the linked publication. Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication. Informational only — not medical advice.

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