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Reducing Systemic Inflammation in People on Antiretroviral Therapy

Reducing Systemic Inflammation in People on Antiretroviral Therapy

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase 2

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Overview

This randomized, open-label clinical trial will evaluate whether adding fostemsavir to current antiretroviral therapy can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease in people with well-controlled HIV. Researchers will compare imaging, clinical and biomarker outcomes between participants who receive fostemsavir in addition to their existing treatment and those who continue with standard care alone.

Description

A randomized, controlled trial of fostemsavir versus standard of care to curb comorbidity in people with well-controlled HIV. (Phase IIb study)

Background and hypothesis: People living with HIV, even when treated with antiretrovirals, develop early onset comorbidities such as cardiovascular disease, cognitive decline and frailty. In a subset of those, this could be due to residual viral particles driving chronic inflammation. Soluble glycoprotein 120 (sgp120) is detectable in close to a third of people living with HIV with undetectable HIV plasma viral loads. It is associated to increased inflammation and immune dysfunction.

People living with HIV with undetectable viral load but detectable soluble HIV gp120 (sgp120) are exposed to chronic inflammation, sustained immune dysfunction, and increased risk of comorbidity. The investigators hypothesize that the addition of fostemsavir, which has been shown to prevents the binding of sgp120 to the human CD4 receptor, to reduce cytokine burst and antibody-dependant cellular citotoxicity, decreased inflammation and immune dysfunction, leading to improved health.

Study population: People living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy, with undetectable viral load and detectable plasmatic sgp120.

Study intervention: The intervention will be either the addition of fostemsavir (Rukobia 600 mg daily) for 24 months to the patient's current ART regimen, or standard of care, which includes the continuation of the ARV regimen and other medications prescribed by their physicians.

Randomization: This is a randomized, open label study with blind outcome adjudication. Randomization will be done in a 1:1 ratio with allocation in parallel arms, stratified by sex and participant statin use at recruitment, through a computerized algorithm with permuted blocks of randomly varying size, to ensure allocation concealment.

Treatment groups:

Arm 1 (active):

  • Once daily oral administration (600 mg extended-release tablet) for 24 months Arm 2 (Standard of care)
  • Participants will continue to follow their current ART regimen, as well as other medications prescribed by their treating physician throughout the trial

Study procedures: At baseline, participants will undergo a CCTA, grip strenght, a B-CAM (online cognitive testing) and contribute blood to the study biobank. Participants will be randomized during the baseline visit, and those randomized to fostemsavir will start taking study treatment. Visits will be done at month 1, 6, 12, 18, 24 and 27. The duration of treatment will be 24 months. At month 24, the CCTA, grip strenght and cognition measures will be repeated. Participants will contribute to the biobank at each study visit.

Study outcomes:

Primary Outcome: Change in total uncalcified plaque volume between baseline and month 24, contrasted between fostemsavir and standard of care.

Imaging Secondary Outcome: Perivascular fat attenuation index at month 24, adjusted for baseline values.

Clinical Secondary Outcome: Clinical events - time to major adverse cardiovascular event, B-CAM (cognition testing) and grip strength at month 24 (adjusted for baseline values).

Biomarker Secondary Outcomes: Biomarkers identified in biobanking samples (virology, immunology, inflammation).

Safety Secondary Outcomes: Risk of adverse events and incidence of treatment discontinuation due to side effects.

A biomarker interim analysis will be performed when 50% of the planned samples size will have completed 1 year of follow-up. Pre-specified biomarker outcomes will be measured using the study-associated biobank.

The intervention will be either the addition of fostemsavir (Rukobia 600 mg daily) to the patient's current ART regimen, or the participant receiving the standard of care.

Statistical considerations:

The planned sample size is 150 (approxiimately 75 per arrm. ) Statistical analysis will be conducted by CITADEL (CRCHUM) after the closing of the study database, according to the statistical analysis plan, which will be registered before the analysis is conducted. All analyses will be done by intention-to-treat; patients will be analyzed in the group they were randomized to. Biobank analyses planned after 50% of participants completed the 12 months biobanking will be done by CITADEL after this part of the data collection is closed.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 40 years or older, or have lived with HIV for 25 years or more, any sex;
  • Undetectable HIV viral load (defined as last viral load measurement less than 50 copies/ml within the last 6 months);
  • Presence of at least one cardiovascular risk factor among the following: longstanding HIV infection (25 years or more), hypertension, diabetes, past or present smoking, dyslipidemia, family history of early onset CVD in a first-degree relative (defined as younger than 55 in males or younger than 65 in females (80)), known previous cardiovascular disease (defined as past myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization, stroke, or coronary artery atherosclerosis with \>= 50% stenosis demonstrated on coronary angiography or CCTA);
  • Participants with past cardiovascular disease must be in a stable clinical condition as judged by the study clinicians;
  • Past cardiovascular events are defined as having occurred at least 3 months before screening;
  • Evidence of detectable plasmatic sgp120 levels at any point in the past year, using the assay described priorly and performed at CRCHUM in Dr Andrés Finzi's laboratory.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Known allergy to study drug;
  • Concomitant treatment with strong cytochrome P450 (CYP3A) inducers, including but not limited to: carbamazepine, phenytoin (anticonvulsants), mitotane (antineoplastic), enzalutamide (androgen receptor inhibitor), rifampicin (antimycobacterial) and St John's wort (Hypericum perforatum, herbal supplement);
  • Planning to become pregnant, pregnant, or breastfeeding (as requested per product monography (55)). Females of childbearing potential must have a negative pregnancy test at baseline visit, and follow contraception requirements throughout the treatment;
  • Contraindication for CT scan use (estimated glomerular filtration rate \[eGFR\] less than 40ml/min using the Modification of Diet in Renal Diseases \[MDRD\] formula or iodine allergy);
  • Elevated risk of prior ionizing radiation exposure outside clinical care exceeding 10 mSV over 3 years, per the investigator's judgement (eg. a participant with occupational ionizing radiation exposure, prior participation in clinical trials with multiple CT scans)
  • Confirmed uncorrected QT value \>500ms or confirmed QTcF \>470 msec for women and \>450 msec for men;
  • Acquired/ congenital long QT syndrome;
  • Current or anticipated treatment with any of the following medications: amiodarone, disopyramide, dofetilide, ibutilide, procainamide, sotalol, and quinidine;
  • Unstable liver disease (as defined by any of the following: presence of ascites, encephalopathy, coagulopathy (INR \> 2.0), hypoalbuminemia (\<30 mg/ml), untreated esophageal or gastric varices, or persistently elevated bilirubinemia (\>1.5x upper limit of normal \[ULN\]), known biliary abnormalities (except Gilbert's syndrome or asymptomatic gallstones or otherwise stable chronic liver disease per investigator assessment);
  • ALT \>=5 times the ULN, OR ALT \>=3xULN and bilirubin \>=1.5xULN with \>35% direct bilirubin;
  • History of liver cirrhosis with CHILD-PUGH classification C;
  • Inability to provide informed consent;
  • Life expectancy of less than 36 months;
  • Inability to present to study visits;
  • Participation in another interventional trial;
  • Known Congestive heart failure with NYHA class 3 or 4.

Study details
    Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
    Cardiovascular Risk Factor

NCT07030920

Centre hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal (CHUM)

1 February 2026

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