| Literature DB >> 20300631 |
John R Koethe1, Andrew O Westfall, Dora K Luhanga, Gina M Clark, Jason D Goldman, Priscilla L Mulenga, Ronald A Cantrell, Benjamin H Chi, Isaac Zulu, Michael S Saag, Jeffrey S A Stringer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The benefit of routine HIV-1 viral load (VL) monitoring of patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART) in resource-constrained settings is uncertain because of the high costs associated with the test and the limited treatment options. We designed a cluster randomized controlled trial to compare the use of routine VL testing at ART-initiation and at 3, 6, 12, and 18 months, versus our local standard of care (which uses immunological and clinical criteria to diagnose treatment failure, with discretionary VL testing when the two do not agree).Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20300631 PMCID: PMC2837376 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Design of the Viral Load Study.
* Immune Reconstitution Syndrome (IRIS) is not considered evidence of clinical treatment failure. The assessment of whether a clinical event represents IRIS or a genuine incident opportunistic infection is determined locally by the clinician. Note: when clinical or immunologic criteria for therapeutic failure are met, a procedure for allocating ‘discretionary’ viral load testing is utilized. Any evident infections are investigated and treated. In cases of suspected immunologic treatment failure, the CD4+ lymphocyte count is repeated one month after treatment of infection and/or intensive adherence counseling. If the patient still meets criteria for therapeutic failure after adherence is judged to be excellent and (in cases of immunologic failure) after a repeat CD4+ lymphocyte count, HIV-1 viral load testing is performed for those patients meeting either clinical or immunologic criteria, but not both. Patients meeting both clinical and immunologic criteria for therapeutic failure are assumed to have virologic failure and the decision to change to ART regimen is made without viral load testing.
Matched study clinic pairs (As of December 1, 2006, prior to study commencement).
| Study clinic | Study arm | Duration of operation (months) | Number of adult patients on ART | Probability of survival at 18 months (95%CI) |
| Matero Ref. | Intervention | 28.0 | 2,375 | 0.86 (0.85, 0.88) |
| Kanyama | Control | 31.1 | 2,728 | 0.88 (0.86, 0.89) |
| Chipata | Intervention | 21.9 | 1,151 | 0.82 (0.80, 0.85) |
| Chawama | Control | 9.0 | 775 | 0.92 (0.90, 0.95) |
| George | Intervention | 28.0 | 1,460 | 0.87 (0.85, 0.89) |
| Chilenje | Control | 27.0 | 1,097 | 0.85 (0.83, 0.87) |
| Mtendere | Intervention | 31.1 | 1,044 | 0.85 (0.83, 0.87) |
| Bauleni | Control | 23.4 | 456 | 0.82 (0.78, 0.86) |
| Kabwata | Intervention | 8.5 | 297 | 0.95 (0.90, 0.99) |
| Matero Main | Control | 4.0 | 227 | 0.91 (0.85, 0.96) |
| Ngombe | Intervention | 0 | 0 | na |
| Makeni | Control | 0 | 0 | na |
*Excludes former patients classified as deceased or lost to follow-up.
Kaplan-Meier estimate of the proportion of adult patients surviving at 18 months post-ART initiation.
Ngombe and Makeni clinics opened in March 2007.
Figure 2Detectable hazard ratio as a consequence of utilizing routine HIV-1 viral load monitoring at varying between-clinic coefficients of variation.
Calculation assumes a historical 18 month post-ART mortality rate of 15.6 per 100 years (140 patients remaining per clinic).
Figure 3Participant screening and enrollment.
Figure 4Participant accrual by clinic.
Superscript denotes matched clinic pairs. ‘Matero Ref.’ refers to Matero Reference clinic.
Baseline characteristics of participants by study arm.
| Control Arm (N = 984) | Intervention Arm (N = 989) | |||
| N | Value | N | Value | |
| Age, mean years (sd) | 984 | 34.3 (8.4) | 989 | 34.8 (8.3) |
| Sex | ||||
| Female | 600 | 61.0% | 584 | 59.0% |
| Male | 384 | 39.0% | 405 | 41.0% |
| Viral Load, mean log10 copies/mL (sd) | 988 | 5.1 (0.8) | ||
| ≤100,000 copies/mL | NA | 358 | 36.2% | |
| >100,000 copies/mL | NA | 630 | 63.8% | |
| Adherence Support | ||||
| No | 13 | 1.3% | 25 | 2.5% |
| Yes | 971 | 98.7% | 964 | 97.5% |
| CD4+ Lymphocyte Count, mean cells/mm3 (sd) | 957 | 146 (82.6) | 941 | 145 (86.8) |
| ≥200 cells/mm3 | 194 | 20.3% | 223 | 23.7% |
| 50–199 cells/mm3 | 652 | 68.1% | 572 | 60.8% |
| <50 cells/mm3 | 111 | 11.6% | 146 | 15.5% |
| WHO Stage | ||||
| I or II | 308 | 32.8% | 295 | 31.1% |
| III | 561 | 59.7% | 560 | 59.1% |
| IV | 70 | 7.5% | 93 | 9.8% |
| Hemoglobin, mean g/dL (sd) | 952 | 10.9 (2.1) | 944 | 11.0 (2.1) |
| ≥8.0 g/dL | 878 | 92.2% | 879 | 93.1% |
| <8.0 g/dL | 74 | 7.8% | 65 | 6.9% |
| Body Mass Index, mean kg/m2 (sd) | 962 | 20.4 (3.4) | 960 | 20.3 (3.7) |
| ≥16 kg/m2 | 894 | 92.9% | 884 | 92.1% |
| <16 kg/m2 | 68 | 7.1% | 76 | 7.9% |
| Creatinine Clearance, mean mL/min (sd) | 894 | 59.7 (26.4) | 929 | 59.7 (22.4) |
| Normal | 703 | 78.8% | 713 | 76.9% |
| Abnormal | 189 | 21.2% | 214 | 23.1% |
| Alanine Aminotransferase, mean u/L (sd) | 902 | 22.4 (18.0) | 936 | 23.1 (16.2) |
| Normal | 869 | 96.3% | 899 | 96.0% |
| Abnormal | 33 | 3.7% | 37 | 4.0% |
| Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy | ||||
| No | 807 | 82.0% | 833 | 84.2% |
| Yes | 177 | 18.0% | 156 | 15.8% |
| Antiretroviral Regimen | ||||
| ZDV + 3TC + NVP | 345 | 35.2% | 359 | 36.3% |
| ZDV + 3TC + EFV | 44 | 4.5% | 46 | 4.7% |
| D4T + 3TC + NVP | 275 | 28.1% | 314 | 31.8% |
| D4T + 3TC + EFV | 65 | 6.6% | 52 | 5.3% |
| TDF + FTC + NVP | 114 | 11.6% | 57 | 5.8% |
| TDF + FTC + EFV | 134 | 13.7% | 157 | 15.9% |
| Other | 2 | 0.2% | 3 | 0.3% |
Note: missing baseline values and values not collected within the required time period are not shown.
*Normal creatinine clearance (calculated using the Cockcroft-Gault equation) ≥90 mL/min.
**Normal alanine aminotransferase <62.5 u/L.