Title: Prospective Evaluation of Antiretrovirals in Resource Limited Settings
1ProspectiveEvaluation ofAntiretrovirals
inResourceLimitedSettings
AIDS Clinical Trials Group Study A5175
2Background Origins of PEARLS
- Data from randomized clinical trials of ARV
efficacy come largely from resource rich areas of
the world - Antiretroviral (ARV) efficacy in resource-limited
settings (RLS) could be affected by multiple
factors including human genetics, culture,
nutrition, and environment - ACTG committee of multinational investigators
began deliberations in 2002 - What to start?
- Common initial ARV regimen is thymidine
analog3TCNNRTI - Data on efficacy of alternative regimens in RLS
needed - PEARLS protocol finalized May 2004
- Primary Objective Demonstrate non-inferiority of
once-daily PI- or NNRTI-containing regimens
compared to a twice-daily ARV regimen for initial
treatment of HIV-1 in diverse areas of the world
3Study Design
- Step 1 (initial regimen) 111 randomization
- Arm 1A ZDV/3TC BID EFV QD
- Arm 1B ddI-EC QD FTC QD ATV QD
- Arm 1C TDF/FTC QD EFV QD
- Randomization stratified by country and screening
plasma HIV RNA ( or lt 100K) - Planned follow-up duration until 30 of
participants have met the primary endpoint
4Primary Endpoint
- Treatment failure (primary efficacy endpoint)
defined by time from randomization to the first
of the following (ITT analysis) - Virological failure (confirmed plasma HIV-1 RNA
1,000 c/mL at week 16 or later) - HIV Disease Progression (new AIDS defining
condition at least 12 weeks following study entry
and not associated with IRIS) - Death due to any cause
5Study Population
- HIV-1-infected men and women gt 18 years of age
- Naïve to antiretroviral therapy (lt 7 days total
SD NVP /- ZDV for pMTCT allowed) - CD4 lt 300 in past 90 days
- 1,571 participants recruited from 12 sites in 8
RLS countries (n1,361) and 31 US sites (n210)
between May 2005 and August 2007
6PEARLS Study Sites
7Planned DSMB Review May 2008
- 5th regularly scheduled interim review of safety
and efficacy data - used pre-specified interim boundary of P0.002,
and corresponding 99.8 confidence intervals
about treatment comparison estimates - Included all visits/specimens through March 9,
2008 - Median follow-up 72 weeks
- Loss-to-follow-up 4 at 48 wks 6 at 96 wks
- No unexpected safety findings
- No conclusion could be reached about the
comparison between Arms 1A and 1C - Conclusive evidence that Arm 1B (ddI-ECFTCATV)
is inferior to control Arm 1A (ZDV/3TCEFV) for
the primary efficacy endpoint
8DSMB Findings
1.67 (1.02, 2.75)
1.77 (1.04, 3.03)
3.00 (0.61,14.87)
0.99 (0.23, 4.26)
9Participant Characteristics
10Cumulative Probability of Treatment
FailureddI-ECFTCATV
11Probability of FailureddI-ECFTCATV
12Death and AIDS Progression Endpoints
ddI-ECFTCATV
13Baseline Correlates of Treatment Failure
ddI-ECFTCATV
Exploratory, multi-covariate Cox regression that
included the following covariates Screening
CD4 cells Plasma HIV-1 RNA Gender, Age,
Race Baseline BMI Geographic location TB
history AIDS OI history Entry HBV surface
Ag Entry Albumin Self reported adherence
wks 1-12
14Baseline Correlates of Treatment Failure
ddI-ECFTCATV
15Conclusions
- The regimen ddI-ECFTCATV had significantly
greater risk of treatment failure compared to
ZDV/3TCEFV - Participants currently taking ddI-ECFTCATV are
being switched to an NNRTI-based study-provided
regimen - The relative efficacy of ddI-ECFTCATV varied by
baseline factors including gender, age, CD4
count, prior AIDS OI, prior TB and country
16Perspectives, Caveats, and Future Studies
- 48 and 96 week treatment success rates for
ddIFTCATV were 84 and 76 - Heterogeneity of treatment failure risk across
countries should be interpreted cautiously
analysis not corrected for multiple comparisons - ddI-EC dose was based on weight and was
administered on an empty stomach separately from
ATV - Pharmacology, drug resistance and adherence
analyses are underway to help explain Arm 1B
findings - The comparison between Arms 1A and 1C is ongoing
and follow-up of these arms continues without
change - Other PEARLS Study presentations MOPE0053,
THPE0044, THPE0098, THPE0820
17Acknowledgements
- PEARLS study participants (N1,571) and sites (N
43) - PEARLS Study Team (N 82)
- PEARLS Co-Chairs Tim Flanigan, James Hakim, N.
Kumarasamy - SDAC - Laura Smeaton, Victor DeGruttola
- ACTG Ops Ron Barnett, Barbara Brizz, Barbara
Bastow, Laura Moran, Lara Hosey - FSTRF Apsara Nair, Ann Walawander
- NIAID/DAIDS Karin Klingman, Edith Swann, Anna
Martinez, Eva Smith - Boehringer-Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals - Carolyn
Conner, Marita McDonough - Bristol-Myers Squibb Gary Thal, Jonathan Uy
- Gilead Sciences Jim Rooney, Audrey Shaw
- GlaxoSmithKline Keith Pappa, Elke Loeschel