| Literature DB >> 27462361 |
Serge P Eholié1, Anani Badje2, Gérard M Kouame3, Jean-Baptiste N'takpe3, Raoul Moh1, Christine Danel2, Xavier Anglaret2.
Abstract
After a period where it was recommended to start antiretroviral therapy (ART) early, the CD4 threshold for treating asymptomatic adults dropped to 200/mm(3) at the beginning of the 2000s. This was mostly due to a great prudence with regards to drug toxicity. The ART-start CD4 threshold in most international guidelines was then raised to 350/mm(3) in 2006-2009 and to 500/mm(3) in 2009-2013. Between 2012 and 2015, international guidelines went the last step further and recommended treating all HIV-infected adults regardless of their CD4 count. This ultimate step was justified by the results of three randomized controlled trials, HPTN 052, Temprano ANRS 12136 and START. These three trials assessed the benefits and risks of starting ART immediately upon inclusion ("early ART") versus deferring ART until the current starting criteria were met ("deferred ART"). Taken together, they recruited 8427 HIV-infected adults in 37 countries. The primary outcome was severe morbidity, a composite outcome that included all-cause deaths, AIDS diseases, and non-AIDS cancers in the three trials. The trial results were mutually consistent and reinforcing. The overall risk of severe morbidity was significantly 44-57 % lower in patients randomized to early ART as compared to deferred ART. Early ART also decreased the risk of AIDS, tuberculosis, invasive bacterial diseases and Kaposi's sarcoma considered separately. The incidence of severe morbidity was 3.2 and 3.5 times as high in HPTN052 and Temprano as in START, respectively. This difference is mostly due to the geographical context of morbidity. The evidence is now strong that initiating ART at high CD4 counts entails individual benefits worldwide, and that this is all the more true in low resource contexts where tuberculosis and other bacterial diseases are highly prevalent. These benefits in addition to population benefits consisting of preventing HIV transmission demonstrated in HPTN052, justify the recommendation that HIV-infected persons should initiate ART regardless of CD4 count. This recommendation faces many challenges, including the fact that switching from "treat at 500 CD4/mm(3)" to "treat everyone" not only requires more tests and more drugs, but also more people to support patients and help them remain in care.Entities:
Keywords: Early antiretroviral treatment; Randomized controlled trial
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27462361 PMCID: PMC4960900 DOI: 10.1186/s12981-016-0111-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Fig. 1Temporal evolution of CD4 criteria to initiate ART in asymptomatic HIV+ adults (IAS, DHHS, EACS and WHO Guidelines)(1). (1) Adapted from Marco Antonio Vitoria, WHO, Geneva. cART combined antiretroviral therapy. DHHS U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. EACS European AIDS Clinical Society. IAS International AIDS Society. WHO World Health Organisation
Main characteristics of the three early ART randomized controlled trials (HPTN052, Temprano ANRS 12136, START)
| HPTN052 | Temprano | START | |
|---|---|---|---|
| First enrolment–last visit | June 2007–May 2011 | March 2008–Jan 2015 | April 2009–May 2015 |
| Protocol | |||
| Study design | Open label RCT | Open label RCT | Open label RCT |
| CD4 inclusion criterion | 350 < CD4 < 550 | 250/350 < CD4 < 800b | >500 |
| ART initiation CD4 thresholda | 250 | 200–350–500b | 350 |
| Composite primary outcome | Death, WHO stage 4, non-AIDS cancers, tuberculosis, severe bacterial infections, serious cardiovascular, diabetes mellitus | Death, AIDS, non AIDS cancers severe bacterial infections | Death, AIDSc, non AIDS cancer, serious cardiovasculard, renal failure, liver failure |
| Number of participants | |||
| Enrolled/analyzed | 1763/1761 | 2076/2056 | 4588/4585 |
| Early ART | 886 | 1033 | 2326 |
| Deferred ART | 875 | 1023 | 2359 |
| Geographical origin | |||
| Africa | 54 % | 100 % | 21 % |
| Europe, USA, Australia, Israel | – | – | 46 % |
| Asia | 30 % | – | 7 % |
| Latin America | 16 % | – | 25 % |
| Baseline characteristics | |||
| % of women | 49 % | 79 % | 27 % |
| Age, median (IQR) | 33 (27–39) | 35 (29–42) | 36 (29–44) |
| CD4 count, median (IQR; Max) | 436 (364–522; 550) | 463 (366–572; 1456e) | 651 (584–765; 2296) |
| Positive serum HBs Ag | 5 % | 9 % | NA |
| Follow-up characteristics | |||
| Received IPT during trial follow-up, % | 3 % | 45 % | NA |
| Follow-up, year, median (IQR) | 2.1 (1.5–2.9) | 2.5 (2.5–2.5) | 2.8 (2.1–3.9) |
RCT randomized controlled trial; IPT isoniazid prophylaxis for tuberculosis
aART-start CD4 threshold for asymptomatic patients randomized to the deferred ART strategy
bFor ethical reasons, the Temprano investigators considered that the WHO revised guidelines had to be followed as soon as they were released
Therefore, they adopted the WHO 2010 guidelines in December 2009 as soon as the WHO rapid advice was released; and further adopted the WHO 2013 guidelines in August 2013. The 2010 and 2013 guidelines revisions impacted the trial procedures at two levels: the eligibility criterion ‘no WHO criteria for starting ART’, and the criteria for starting ART in participants assigned to the Deferred-ART strategy:
Asymptomatic patients were considered having ‘no WHO criteria for starting ART’ and therefore eligible for the trial: between the trial start and November 2009: if they had more than 250 CD4/mm3; Between December 2009 and July 2012: if they had more than 350 CD4/mm3; As enrolment was completed in July 2012, the WHO 2013 guidelines revision did not impact the eligibility criteria
Asymptomatic participants assigned to the Deferred-ART strategy started ART: between the trial start and November 2009: whenever they met the WHO 2006 criteria for starting ART (CD4 count <200/mm3); Between December 2009 and July 2013: whenever they met the WHO 2010 criteria for starting ART (CD4 count <350/mm3); Between August 1st 2013: whenever they met the WHO 2013 criteria for starting ART (CD4 count <500/mm3; or stable partnership with an HIV-negative individual)
cExcluding HSV and oesophageal candidiasis
dMyocardial infarction, stroke, or coronary revascularization
eTemprano, patients were eligible for the trial if the pre-inclusion CD4 count (measured within 1 months prior to randomization) was below 800/mm3. The “baseline” CD4 count distribution shown here is the distribution of values measured at inclusion (ie after informed consent), not the pre-inclusion value that determined eligibility. This explains why some patients had CD4 counts higher than 800/mm3 at baseline
Fig. 2Geographical location of HPTN052, Temprano and START. Source Adapted from a Wikipedia map from http://www.vectorworldmap.com/; public domain. Asterisks recruitment for the START trial in Europe: Germany 7 %, United Kingdom 7 %, Spain 5 %, Belgium 2 %, France 2 %, Greece 2 %, Denmark 1 %, Italy 1 %, Poland 1 %, Portugal 1 %, Switzerland 1 %, others (Czech republic, Estonia, Finland, Luxemburg, Norway, Sweden, Ireland, all <1 %)
Main outcomes of the three early ART randomized controlled trials (HPTN052, Temprano ANRS 12136, START)
| Deferred ART | Early ART | Adjusted hazard ratiof (95 % CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Rate per 100 PY | N | Rate per 100 PY | ||
| Composite primary outcome | |||||
| HPTN052 | 91 | 4.5 | 71 | 3.5 | 0.73 (0.52–1.03) |
| Temprano | 111 | 4.9 | 64 | 2.8 | 0.56 (0.41–0.76) |
| Baseline CD4 < 500 | 73 | 5.5 | 41 | 3.0 | 0.56 (0.38–0.83) |
| Baseline CD4 ≥ 500 | 38 | 4.1 | 23 | 2.4 | 0.56 (0.33–0.94) |
| START | 96 | 1.4 | 42 | 0.6 | 0.43 (0.30–0.62) |
| Separated outcome | |||||
| Deatha | |||||
| HPTN052 | 15 | NA | 11 | NA | 0.73 (0.34–1.59) |
| Temprano | 26 | 1.9 | 21 | 0.8 | 0.80 (0.45–1.40) |
| START | 21 | 0.3 | 12 | 0.2 | 0.58 (0.28–1.17) |
| AIDSa | |||||
| HPTN052 | 61 | NA | 40 | NA | 0.64 (0.43–0.96) |
| Temprano | 65 | 2.8 | 33 | 1.4 | 0.50 (0.33–0.76) |
| START | 50 | 0.7 | 14 | 0.2 | 0.28 (0.15–0.50) |
| Tuberculosisa,b | |||||
| HPTN052 | 34 | 1.8 | 17 | 0.8 | 0.49 (0.28–0.89) |
| Temprano | 55 | 2.4 | 28 | 1.2 | 0.50 (0.32–0.79) |
| START | 20 | 0.3 | 6 | 0.1 | 0.29 (0.12–0.73) |
| AIDS and non-AIDS malignanciesa,c | |||||
| HPTN052 | 7 | NA | 4 | NA | NA |
| Temprano | 6 | NA | 3 | NA | NA |
| START | 39 | NA | 14 | NA | NA |
| Invasive bacterial diseasesd | |||||
| HPTN052 | 13 | NA | 20 | NA | NA |
| Temprano | 36 | 1.5 | 14 | 0.6 | 0.39 (0.21–0.71) |
| START | 36 | 0.5 | 14 | 0.2 | 0.38 (0.20–0.70) |
| Serious cardiovasculare | |||||
| HPTN052 | 3 | NA | 1 | NA | NA |
| Temprano | 6 | NA | 3 | NA | NA |
| START | 14 | 0.20 | 12 | 0.17 | 0.84 (0.39–1.81) |
N number of participants who had at least one such type of outcome; ART antiretroviral treatment; NA non available; PY person-years
aComponent of the composite primary outcome in the three trials
bTotal number of pulmonary and extra pulmonary TB episodes recorded in the three trials: HPTN052: pulmonary, n = 30 (early: 14; deferred: 16); extra-pulmonary, n = 20 (early: 3; deferred: 17); Temprano ANRS 12136: pulmonary, n = 43 (early: 19; deferred: 24); extra-pulmonary, n = 41 (early: 9; deferred: 33). START: pulmonary, n = 23 (early: 6; deferred: 17); extra-pulmonary, n = 3 (early: 0; deferred: 3)
cCervical carcinoma, Kaposi’s sarcoma, Lymphoma, Hodgkin’s, Lymphoma, non-Hodgkin’s non-AIDS cancers
dInvasive bacterial diseases were a component of the composite primary outcome in Temprano and HPTN052, and a secondary outcome in START
eSerious cardiovascular diseases were a component of the composite primary outcome in START and HPTN052, and a secondary outcome in Temprano
fThe trials analyses were adjusted for geographic regions (START) or study site (HPTN 052 and Temprano). In Temprano, Hazard Ratios were also adjusted for the IPT/no IPT treatment