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Switch Either Near Suppression Or THOusand

Switch to Second-line Versus WHO-guided Standard of Care for Unsuppressed Patients on First-line ART With Viremia Below 1000 Copies/mL - a Multicenter, Parallel-group, Open-label, Randomized Clinical Study in Rural Lesotho

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03088241
Acronym
SESOTHO
Enrollment
80
Registered
2017-03-23
Start date
2017-08-01
Completion date
2020-05-23
Last updated
2022-03-22

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

Conditions

HIV/AIDS

Keywords

randomized clinical trial, low level viremia, lesotho, resource-limited setting, ART first-line failure

Brief summary

This trial addresses the question of the viral load (VL) threshold for switching from first-line to second-line antiretroviral therapy (ART). The WHO currently sets the threshold at 1000 copies/mL. However, the optimal threshold for defining virological failure and the need to switch ART regimen has not been determined. In fact, people with VL levels of less than 1000 copies/mL, however, not fully suppressed, are at increased risk for drug resistance mutations (DRM) and subsequent virological failure. In resource-limited settings where VL monitoring is not as frequent as in high-income countries, this could have serious implications and patients may continue on a failing regimen for a long period. Our research consortium will conduct a multicenter, parallel-group, open-label, randomized clinical trial in a resource-limited setting to assess whether a threshold of 100 copies/mL compared to the WHO-defined threshold of 1000 copies/mL for switching to second-line ART among unsuppressed HIV-positive patients on first-line ART will lead to better outcomes.

Detailed description

Study background & rational: The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) launched the 90-90-90 targets for 2020 based on the result of newly-acquired scientific evidence that - irrespective of CD4 count - early antiretroviral treatment (ART) for HIV-positive individuals is beneficial to them and prevents HIV transmission. UNAIDS expects that the 90-90-90 targets will lead to a reduction in the yearly global HIV incidence from 2 million currently to 500,000 by 2020. A crucial step to achieve the third pillar of the UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets - 90% viral suppression among HIV-positive individuals on treatment - and thus ensure a successful treatment outcome is the monitoring and management of first-line ART failure. Since 2013, the WHO recommends routine viral load (rVL) measurement as the preferred monitoring strategy in resource-limited settings and defines virological failure as confirmed VL 1000 copies/mL despite good adherence. Specifically, the guidelines recommend that in case of a VL ≥ 1000 copies/mL the patient should undergo enhanced adherence support and a second VL test 3 months later. A second VL ≥ 1000 copies/mL with confirmed good adherence would trigger the switch to a second-line regimen, whereas if the VL is \< 1000 copies/mL the patient should continue unaltered first-line ART. However, the optimal threshold for defining virological failure and the need for switching ART regimen has not yet been determined. In fact, people with VL levels of less than 1000 copies/mL, but not fully suppressed (usually defined as 50-100 copies/mL), are at a increased risk for drug resistance mutations (DRM) and subsequent virological failure. A recently published study from our research consortium in Lesotho indicates similar findings, demonstrating a significant accumulation of drug resistance mutations in patients with VL levels of less than 1000 copies/mL. The VL threshold of 1000 copies/mL recommended by the WHO and the Lesotho national guidelines for the switch to second-line ART is likely to miss a substantial number of patients on first-line ART with persisting virus replication below 1000 copies/mL with DRM. In resource-limited settings where VL monitoring is not as frequent as in high-income countries, this could have serious implications: after a VL below 1000 copies/mL the patient may not receive a follow-up VL for up to a year, and thus may continue on a failing regimen for a long period of time. In conclusion, such patients are at increased risk for DRM, accumulation of further resistance mutations, drug-resistant virus transmission, and subsequent virological failure. Study hypothesis: Our research consortium hypothesizes that in patients on first-line ART with two consecutive unsuppressed VL measurements equal/more than 100 copies/mL, where the second VL is between 100 and 999 copies/mL, switch to second-line ART (intervention group) will lead to a higher rate of viral resuppression (VL \< 50 copies/mL) and is therefore superior compared to not switching to second-line ART according to WHO guidelines (control group, standard of care). Study design: Multicenter (2-12 centers), parallel-group (1:1 allocation), open-label, superiority, prospective randomized clinical study.

Interventions

OTHERswitch

switch to second-line ART

Sponsors

Swiss Tropical & Public Health Institute
CollaboratorOTHER
SolidarMed, Lucerne, Switzerland
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
SolidarMed
CollaboratorOTHER
University of Basel
CollaboratorOTHER
University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
CollaboratorOTHER
Butha-Buthe Hospital, Lesotho
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Ministry of Health, Lesotho
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Niklaus Labhardt
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

Multicenter (2-12 centers), parallel-group (1:1 allocation), open-label, superiority, prospective randomized clinical study

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* On NNRTI-based first-line ART with two consecutive unsuppressed VL equal/more 100 copies/mL, with the second VL between 100 and 999 copies/mL. * Lives and/or works in the district of Butha-Buthe and declares to seek follow-up at one of the study-facilities * Signed written informed consent. For children aged \<16 years, a main caregiver, and for illiterate a literate witness, has to provide oral and written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

* On ART less than 6 months * On protease-inhibitor containing ART or any other second-line ART * Bad adherence (self-reported at least 1 dose missing in the last 4 weeks, resp. 2 doses of a twice-daily-regimen) * Clinical WHO stage 3 or 4 at enrolment

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
viral suppression9 months after randomizationProportion of virologically suppressed (VL \< 50 copies/mL) participants 9 months after randomization.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Proportion of participants with viral resuppression (<50 copies/mL)6 months after randomization
Proportion of virologically suppressed (VL < 50 copies/mL) participants by different VL groups at enrolment (VL 100-599 vs 600-999 copies/mL copies/mL)9 months after randomization
Proportion of patients with adverse events and serious adverse events at 9 months after randomization9 months after randomization
Long-term follow-up endpoint: Proportion of patients that are alive, retained in care and virologically suppressed (VL < 50 copies/mL) at 24 months24 months after randomization
Proportion of virologically suppressed (VL < 50 copies/mL) participants by demographic groups (children vs pregnant women vs adults)9 months after randomization
Sustained virologic failure6 and 9 months after randomizationProportion of participants with unsuppressed VL \>50 copies/mL at 6 and 9 months
Proportion of participants with different VL thresholds (VL <100, <200, <400, <1000 copies/mL) at 9 months after randomization9 months after randomization
Adherence at 3, 6, 9 months, assessed by self-reported dose omission3, 6, 9 months after randomization
Change in values (versus values at baseline) of body-weight (kg) at 9 months9 months after randomization
Change in values (versus values at baseline) of haemoglobin (g/dL) at 9 months9 months after randomization
Change in values (versus values at baseline) of CD4 count (cells/mL) at 9 months9 months after randomization
Change in values (versus values at baseline) of lipids (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides; mmol/l) at 9 months9 months after randomization
Change in values (versus values at baseline) of new clinical WHO 3 or 4 events (proportion) count at 9 months9 months after randomization
Change in values (versus values at baseline) of deaths (all-causes) (proportion) at 9 months9 months after randomization

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Prevalence of major viral resistance mutations to first-line regimen in each treatment arm for all samples for which an RT-PCR amplification is successful9 months after randomization
pre-specified subgroup: Log-drop9 months after randomizationViral resuppression among individuals with a \>0.5 drop in log10 VL between the first screening VL and the second screening VL (i.e. VL at enrolment)
Direct costs of each treatment arm9 months and 24 months after randomization

Countries

Lesotho

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 7, 2026