The RIO trial: rationale, design, and the role of community involvement in a randomised placebo-controlled trial of antiretroviral therapy plus dual long-acting HIV-specific broadly neutralising antibodies (bNAbs) in participants diagnosed with recent HIV infection—study protocol for a two-stage randomised phase II trial

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 23 - Trang 1-26 - 2022
Ming Jie Lee1, Simon Collins2, Daphne Babalis3, Nicholas Johnson3, Emanuela Falaschetti3, A. Toby Prevost4, Ambreen Ashraf3, Milaana Jacob3, Tom Cole3, Lisa Hurley5, Matthew Pace6, Ane Ogbe6, Maryam Khan1, Panagiota Zacharopoulou6, Helen Brown6, Euan Sutherland7, Hanna Box1, Julie Fox8, Steven Deeks9, Jill Horowitz10, Michel C. Nussenzweig10, Marina Caskey10, John Frater6, Sarah Fidler1
1Department of Infectious Disease, Imperial College London, London, UK
2HIV I-Base, London, UK
3Imperial Clinical Trials Unit, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK
4King’s Clinical Trials Unit, King’s College London, London, UK
5NIHR Imperial Clinical Research Facility, Imperial College London, London, UK
6Peter Medawar Building for Pathogen Research, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
7Imperial College Clinical Trials Centre, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, UK
8Harrison Wing, Guy’s and St Thomas Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
9Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, USA
10Laboratory of Molecular Immunology, The Rockefeller University, New York, USA

Tóm tắt

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has led to dramatic improvements in survival for people living with HIV, but is unable to cure infection, or induce viral control off therapy. Designing intervention trials with novel agents with the potential to confer a period of HIV remission without ART remains a key scientific and community goal. We detail the rationale, design, and outcomes of a randomised, placebo-controlled trial of two HIV-specific long-acting broadly neutralising antibodies (bNAbs): 3BNC117-LS and 10-1074-LS, which target CD4 binding site and V3 loop respectively, on post-treatment viral control. RIO is a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blinded prospective phase II study. Eligible individuals will have started ART within 3 months of primary HIV infection and have viral sequences that appear to be sensitive to both bNAbs. It will randomise 72 eligible participants 1:1 to the following arms via a two-stage design. In Stage 1, arm A participants are given dual long-acting (LS-variants) bNAbs infusions, followed by intensively monitored Analytical Treatment Interruption (ATI) (n = 36); in arm B, participants receive placebo infusions followed by ATI. The primary endpoint will be time to viral rebound within 36 weeks after ATI. Upon viral rebound, the participant and researcher are unblinded. Participants in arm A recommence ART and complete the study. Participants in arm B are invited to restart ART and enroll into Stage 2 where they will receive open-label LS bNAbs, followed by a second ATI 24 weeks after. Secondary and exploratory endpoints include adverse events, time to undetectable viraemia after restarting ART, immunological markers, HIV proviral DNA, serum bNAb concentrations in blood, bNAb resistance at viral rebound, and quality of life measures. The two-stage design was determined in collaboration with community involvement. This design allows all participants the option to receive bNAbs. It also tests the hypothesis that bNAbs may drive sustained HIV control beyond the duration of detectable bNAb concentrations. Community representatives were involved at all stages. This included the two-stage design, discussion on the criteria to restart ART, frequency of monitoring visits off ART, and reducing the risk of onward transmission to HIV-negative partners. It also included responding to the challenges of COVID-19. The protocol is registered on Clinical.trials.gov and EudraCT and has approval from UK Ethics and MHRA.

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