The study hypothesis is to determine the feasibility of switching HIV-HCV co-infected patients receiving methadone or buprenorphine/naloxone as opioid substitution therapy with suppressed HIV RNA viral load on current antiretroviral therapy to elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (E/C/F/TAF, Genvoya) followed by 12 weeks of HCV antiviral therapy with sofosbuvir/velpatasvir (SOF/VEL, Epclusa), followed then by switch to bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (B/F/TAF, Biktarvy) for an additional 48 weeks.
This clinical study is a phase IV, prospective, open-label study that is being conducted in 25 participants over the age of 18 on stable antiretroviral therapy with documented HIV viral suppression who have received opioid substitution therapy (OST) for at least three months. The study is designed to assess the feasibility of the switch from a participant's current antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimen to Genvoya, followed shortly thereafter by initiation of Epclusa for treatment of HCV co-infection with subsequent optimization of the ART regimen to Biktarvy in patients co-infected with HIV and HCV receiving methadone or buprenorphine/naloxone as OST. Participants will be recruited from the Infectious Diseases Clinic (IDC) in Regina, a tertiary referral site that cares for a large number of patients living with HIV and viral hepatitis.
Eligible participants will have baseline investigations performed, including measures of renal parameters and bone mineral densitometry, and will be switched from their current antiretroviral regimen to Genvoya for the first 12 weeks of the study. Various reasons for switching may play a role in clinician decision-making, including simplification, improved tolerability, an improved metabolic risk profile, etc. The primary drawbacks to Genvoya in clinical practice include the potential for drug-drug interactions due to the presence of cobicistat, and the relatively low so-called "genetic barrier" of resistance, meaning that sub-optimal adherence may be more likely to result in antiretroviral resistance. Participants must already be fully suppressed at the time of screening to be enrolled in the study, as well as having been stable on OST for at least three months, in order to reduce the risk of poor adherence.
After the switch to Genvoya occurs, participants will be seen at weeks 1 and 4 to assess for adverse events, including any changes in OST dosing. Laboratory testing will be performed as per standard of care with CD4 counts and HIV viral loads checked at weeks 4 and 12 to ensure stable virologic suppression following switch of ART. After 12 weeks of Genvoya, provided that participants remain stably suppressed in terms of their HIV, they will then receive 12 weeks of Epclusa to treat their chronic HCV infection while continuing to take Genvoya. Participants are allowed to have any HCV genotype and may have stage 0-4 liver fibrosis as assessed by transient elastography, but may not have decompensated cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma. Participants will be followed at weeks 13, 16 and 24 with clinical assessments performed, and repeat HCV viral loads at weeks 16 and 24 (end of HCV treatment) as per standard of care. Participants will be seen at weeks 36 and 48 and have their HCV viral loads performed to determine whether they have achieved a sustained virologic response 12 and 24 weeks following end of HCV therapy, which defines HCV cure. Bone mineral densitometry will be performed at week 48 to determine any interval change in bone mineral density has occurred between study initiation and week 48.
After the 48 weeks of treatment with Genvoya, participants who agree will be switched to a modern unboosted ARV regimen consisting of Biktarvy through a 48 week extension phase. Biktarvy is approved by Health Canada as an unboosted integrase-inhibitor based single-tablet regimen with once-daily dosing and a small pill size, which facilitates adherence to treatment. Due to the presence of bictegravir, Biktarvy is likely to have a higher "genetic barrier" of resistance than Genvoya, and the lack of boosting significantly decreases the risk of drug-drug interactions. During the extension phase, participants will be seen at weeks 49, 52, 60, 72. 84 and 96 for clinical assessments with HIV viral loads, CD4 counts and standard of care laboratory testing. Bone mineral densitometry will be performed at week 96 to determine any interval change in bone mineral density has occurred between study initiation and week 96.
At each visit, participants will see a study coordinator and have vital signs performed, a review of their concurrent medications including any changes in their methadone dosing, review for any adverse events, and weight and height measurements. Laboratory investigations and urine drug screens will be performed as per current standards of care. Validated questionnaires assessing whether the participant is having any symptoms or signs of opioid withdrawal or overdose as well as determining treatment satisfaction with their new antiretroviral regimen. will be administered at each visit. Each visit is anticipated to take approximately 60-90 minutes, and the appointment for bone mineral density testing will take no longer than 2 hours to complete with waiting time included. All study medication will be provided during study period but not after study completion.
At study conclusion, demographic and other baseline variables will be summarized using percentage, mean, median, standard deviation and interquartile range as appropriate. The proportion of subjects achieving the various endpoints and the associated 95% confident interval will be calculated. Adverse events will be summarized by grade and relationship to treatment in addition to presenting the data in a listing format.
Condition | Osteopenia, Drug abuse, Opioid Dependence, Chronic viral hepatitis C, Viral infection, Opioid Use Disorder, HCV Coinfection, Co-infection, Intravenous Drug Usage, HIV-1-infection, Methadone Dependence, HIV/AIDS, Co-infection, Substance Abuse, Drug use, Viral Infections, Buprenorphine Dependence, HIV-1-infection, HIV/AIDS, Co-infection, co-infections, mixed infections, polymicrobial infection, opiate dependence, HIV-1-infection, HIV/AIDS |
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Treatment | Epclusa, Genvoya, Biktarvy |
Clinical Study Identifier | NCT03549312 |
Sponsor | Saskatchewan Health Authority - Regina Area |
Last Modified on | 23 January 2021 |
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