Following
is the text of a National Institutes of Health (NIH) announcement about the study:
Study
Suggests Immune Systems of Untreated
HIV-infected Individuals May Deteriorate
Faster than Previously Thought
The
immune systems of untreated HIV-infected individuals appear to deteriorate faster
than previously thought, according to preliminary results of a small clinical
trial. This finding suggests that clinicians may need to monitor people with recent
HIV infection as closely as they monitor people with more advanced disease, the
study investigators postulate.
Known as the SETPOINT
study, or A5217, the trial was designed to compare the point at which the
amount of HIV in the blood levels off in two groups of people with recent HIV
infection: those who receive a 36-week course of antiretroviral therapy (ART),
and those who receive no therapy until they meet immunologic, virologic or clinical
criteria for starting ART.
The amount of HIV in the blood is thought to
reach a plateau, known as the viral setpoint, and remain there for years after
infection. The level of this setpoint is thought to influence the severity of
the course of HIV disease. The SETPOINT investigators wanted to learn whether
early treatment lowers the viral setpoint.
In the final analysis, the difference
in viral setpoint between the two groups could not be statistically evaluated
because too few viral setpoints were directly measured. However, the study investigators
discovered that those who did not receive the 36-week course of ART progressed
to the point of needing continuous ART more quickly than anticipated. [emphasis
added-Ed]
The median CD4+ T cell count in the deferral group at study entry
was 556 cells per cubic millimeter (mm3). Since it is commonly thought that people
with untreated HIV infection lose approximately 60 CD4+ T cells/mm3 per year,
and since U.S. guidelines recommend starting ART when the CD4+ T cell count drops
below 350 cells/mm3, the study team expected at least two to three years would
elapse before members of the deferral group would need treatment. Thus, it
was surprising that 20 of 39 members of the deferral group needed treatment within
one and a half years. [emphasis added-Ed]
Close observation of a larger
population of individuals with recent HIV infection will be necessary to validate
this finding, which could have implications for future clinical trial design and
public health policy.
The SETPOINT study has been conducted by the Acute
Infection and Early Disease Research Program and the AIDS Clinical Trials Group,
both funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID),
part of the National Institutes of Health. The principal investigator is Christine
Hogan, MD, an assistant professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin and an adjunct
assistant professor of clinical medicine at Columbia University.
The trial
has been stopped ahead of schedule because, during a routine interim review, an
independent data and safety monitoring board (DSMB) determined that the early
treatment group had a superior outcome largely driven by HIV disease progression
in the deferral group. The DSMB also found that more than half of the deferral
group needed to initiate continuous ART before the viral setpoint could be measured
at 72 weeks. As a result, the trial was unable to demonstrate a meaningful difference
in measured viral setpoints between the two groups.
The DSMB recommended
ending the SETPOINT trial early because continuing it would not likely change
the outcome or yield additional clinically useful information. The DSMB also recommended
that study staff offer antiretroviral drugs for up to 36 weeks to anyone in the
early treatment group who had not yet completed his or her 36-week course of medication.
NIAID concurred with these recommendations.
The study team is working with
the participants who started ART during the trial and their physicians to ensure
a smooth transition to clinical care outside the study. The team also is providing
ART for up to 36 weeks to volunteers in the early treatment group who have not
finished their 36-week course of therapy and wish to complete it.
Further
information about the SETPOINT trial may be found at www.clinicaltrials.gov
under identifier NCT00090779.
8/07/09
Source
National
Institutes of Health (via AIDSInfo.nih.gov). Study Suggests Immune Systems of
Untreated HIV-Infected Individuals May Deteriorate Faster than Previously Thought.
Press Release. July 31, 2009.