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A Study of T-20 in HIV-Positive Adults

A Phase II Evaluation of the Safety, Plasma Pharmacokinetics, and Antiviral Activity of T-20 Administered to HIV-1 Positive Adults By Continuous Subcutaneous Infusion or Subcutaneous Injection

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00002228
Enrollment
78
Registered
2001-08-31
Start date
Unknown
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2005-06-24

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

HIV Infections

Keywords

Injections, Subcutaneous, HIV-1, Anti-HIV Agents, peptide T20

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to see if it is safe and effective to give T-20 to HIV-positive adults. T-20 is an anti-HIV drug.

Detailed description

Patients are randomly placed into 1 of 6 groups: 4 dose levels of T-20 are given by subcutaneous infusion and 2 by subcutaneous injection. The entire study lasts 7 weeks; including a 2-week screening period, followed by 28 days of treatment and 1 week of follow-up.

Interventions

Sponsors

Trimeris
Lead SponsorINDUSTRY

Study design

Primary purpose
TREATMENT

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

Concurrent Medication: Allowed: * Any antiretroviral agent, provided the regimen has not changed within 6 weeks of the screening visit. * Antibiotics for bacterial infections. * Prophylactic medications for P. carinii pneumonia and for M. avium, including azithromycin. * Medications for symptomatic treatment such as antipyretics, analgesics, and antiemetics. Patients must have: HIV-1 seropositive status.

Exclusion criteria

Co-existing Condition: Patients with the following symptoms or conditions are excluded: Concurrent neoplasm (except for basal cell carcinoma of the skin, in situ carcinoma of the cervix, and non-disseminated stable Kaposi's sarcoma). Concurrent Medication: Excluded: * Patients must not be taking any concurrent antiretroviral therapy (for at least 2 weeks prior to baseline) or the patient is to be on a stable antiretroviral regimen which has not changed for at least 6 weeks prior to baseline. * Treatment with any of the following: * immunomodulators, biological response modifiers, chemotherapy that cannot be discontinued for the duration of the study, astemizole, terfenadine, cisapride, triazolam, midazolam, rifampin, clarithromycin, or an investigational drug within 30 days prior to the initial visit. Patients with the following prior conditions are excluded: * Evidence of active opportunistic infections, or unexplained temperature greater than or equal to 38.5 Celsius for 7 consecutive days within 30 days prior to screening visit. * Chronic diarrhea (defined as greater than 3 liquid stools per day which persists for 15 days) within 30 days prior to screening visit. * Diagnosis of hemophilia or other clotting disorders. Prior Medication: Excluded: \- Prior treatment with an HIV vaccine. Prior Treatment: Excluded: Major organ allograft. Risk Behavior: Excluded: Evidence of substance abuse or addiction that, in the opinion of the investigator, may interfere with the patient's ability to comply with the dosing schedule and protocol evaluations.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026