Treating
HIV-Infected Infants Early Helps Them Live Longer
Hundreds
of thousands of babies around the world are born each year with HIV--more than
half a million in 2006 alone. Caring for these children is complicated by the
fact that their immune systems are not fully developed in the first year of life,
which makes them especially susceptible to rapid HIV disease progression and death.
The current standard of HIV care in many parts of the world is to treat infants
with antiretroviral therapy--but only after they show signs of illness or a weakened
immune system.
Now the initial results of an ongoing clinical trial sponsored
by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), suggests that more HIV-infected infants
survive if they are given therapy early on, regardless of their apparent state
of health.
Called the "Children with HIV Early Antiretroviral Therapy"
(CHER) study, this is a phase III, randomized clinical trial led by Avy Violari,
M.D., FCPaed (SA), of the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South
Africa, and Mark Cotton, MBChB, MMed, of the University of Stellenbosch in Cape
Town, South Africa. Dr. Violari presented the trial results this week at the 4th
IAS conference in Sydney, AU (July 22-25, 2007).
"Children with HIV
infection frequently show rapid disease progression within the first year of life
due to their developing immune systems and susceptibility to other serious infections,"
says NIH Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. "This is the first randomized clinical
trial that shows that infants treated before three months of age will do better
than infants who have their treatment delayed."
"The results
of this trial could have significant public health implications worldwide,"
says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "Because these findings will cause
experts to consider changes in standards of care in many parts of the world, NIAID
has released details of the interim results to the World Health Organization,
local ethics committees, regulatory authorities and other key stakeholders for
their consideration and evaluation for possible implementation."
"These
initial results also highlight the importance of diagnosing HIV infections early--within
the first six to twelve weeks of life," says Edward Handelsman, M.D., chief
of the Pediatric Medicine Branch in NIAID's Division of AIDS, which is overseeing
the CHER study. Dr. Handelsman stresses, however, that the study results cannot
necessarily be generalized to asymptomatic adults or older children because young
infants are very different in immune function, time since HIV infection and susceptibility
to other serious illnesses.
The evidence came to light last month after
a routine review by the trial's data and safety monitoring board (DSMB), an independent
committee composed of clinical research experts, statisticians, ethicists and
community representatives from Africa, Europe and the United States that regularly
reviews interim data from the CHER study to ensure the safety of study participants.
CHER
had begun two years earlier to evaluate whether early antiretroviral therapy given
over a limited period of time would delay disease progression. The idea was that
this approach might allow the immune system to develop and possibly allow the
child to stop treatment for a period of time and therefore avoid continuous therapy
from an early age.
Starting in July 2005, HIV-infected infants between
6 and 12 weeks old without immune suppression or severe symptoms of clinical disease
were enrolled at the Perinatal HIV Research Unit in Soweto and Tygerberg Children's
Hospital in Cape Town. By early 2007, 377 babies were enrolled in one of three
groups--those receiving immediate antiretroviral therapy for 40 weeks, those receiving
immediate antiretroviral therapy for 96 weeks, and a control group whose treatment
was initiated after doctors observed signs of clinical or immunological progression
toward the development of AIDS (the current standard of HIV care in many parts
of the world).
The trial is designed to continue through 2011, but after
reviewing early trial data on June 20, 2007, the DSMB found a significant increase
in survival among infants who received immediate antiretroviral therapy. At the
time of the DSMB review, 96 percent of these children were alive, compared to
only 84 percent of the children in the control group. Based on this finding, the
DSMB concluded that providing early antiretroviral therapy to infants is more
effective in preventing early death than delaying treatment until clinical or
immunological disease triggers are observed.
The DSMB recommended that
no additional infants be placed in the deferred-treatment arm of the study and
infants previously enrolled in this arm be evaluated for potential initiation
of antiretroviral therapy. NIAID accepted these recommendations and informed the
study investigators at each site. The doctors at those sites have been contacting
the parents and legal guardians of the infants involved in the study to inform
them of the interim findings and call them in for evaluation. The DSMB also recommended
that all infants enrolled in the study be followed for the planned duration of
approximately 3.5 years and those in the 40- and 96-week treatment groups continue
with the study.
Perinatal HIV Research Unit, University
of Witwatersrand, Witwatersrand, South Africa, Children's Infectious Diseases
Clinical Research Unit, Faculty of Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch,
South Africa, MRC-Clinical Trials Unit, London, United Kingdom, Division of AIDS,
NIAID, NIH, Bethesda, United States.
07/27/07
Reference
A Violari, M Cotton, D Gibb, and others (for the CHER Study Team).
Antiretroviral therapy initiated before 12 weeks of age reduces early mortality
in young HIV-infected infants: evidence from the Children with HIV Early Antiretroviral
Therapy (CHER) Study. 4th IAS Conference. July 22-25, 2007. Sydney, AU. Abstract
(Late Breaker) WeSS103. Abstract
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