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Adult AIDS Clinical Trials Group International Therapeutic Initiative AACTG • Funded by NIAID/DAIDS (NIH) • Established in 1986 • Mission: conduct investigator-initiated, hypothesis-driven and pathogenesis-based clinical trials of the treatment of HIV infection and its sequelae • Approximately 75 multi-center studies active at any time at 35 US sites • 2,000 - 3,000 subjects enrolled per year AACTG International Therapeutic Clinical Trials Initiative • Announced late 2001 • Goals: – Conduct research to elucidate the most effective approaches to HIV-1 therapy in resource limited international settings – Transfer technology and develop infrastructure to conduct clinical trials in resource limited settings – Support NIAID/DAIDS prevention research efforts (HPTN, HVTN) – Accelerate access to state-of-the-art care in resource limited settings through resource, training and technology transfer and infrastructure development – Study the impact of state-of-the-art care and treatment on persons with HIV-1 infection in resource limited settings AACTG ICTU Locations UNAIDS 2001 ACTG A5175 • Partnership with HPTN • Hypothesis: An all NRTI regimen and a once-daily regimen are as safe and effective as a standard three drug, twice-daily regimen of 2 NRTIs and an NNRTI • Sites: 12 ICTUs in 8 resource-limited countries • Population: HIV-1-infected persons with < 300 CD4+ cells/L • Design: Randomized, open-label, 3 arms • Primary endpoint: plasma HIV RNA • Duration: 2.5 years A5175 long-term objectives • Technology transfer • Simplified measures for monitoring efficacy of antiretroviral therapy A5175 Standard of Care Issues • Development of research objectives that are locally relevant – Avoid exploitation – Study design by an international committee with representatives from each site – Use ARVs that are/will be available for use in the countries where the study is conducted – Priority questions: 1) Evaluation of PI- and NNRTI-sparing regimens 2) Evaluation of once-daily regimens A5175 Standard of Care Issues • Post-trial drug access – Sponsors (NIH, pharmaceutical companies) will not provide drugs after the study is over – Standard of care is diverse across the study sites – Standard of care is dynamic – Each site will develop a plan for post-study ARV access in coordination with local governmental and non-governmental agencies A5175 Standard of Care Issues • Effects of results of studies conducted in developed countries on study design – Planned DSMB interim review of A5095 found that ZDV/3TC/ABC provided inferior HIV suppression compared to ZDV/3TC/EFV – Atlantic study found that d4T/3TC/ddI provided inferior HIV suppression compared to d4T/3TC/NVP – A5175 team felt it was unethical to randomize participants to a comparison of ZDV/3TC/ddI with ZDV/3TC/EFV (or NVP) – ZDV/3TC/ddI arm removed from the study A5175 Standard of Care Issues • Influence of pharmaceutical industry on study design – Study is dependent on pharmaceutical companies for donation of ARVs – One sponsor will not support study unless the ZDV/3TC/ddI arm is included – Scientific objectives of ARV research in developing countries is being influenced by pharmaceutical company marketing concerns – Pharma-independent sources of ARVs are needed for clinical trials in resource-limited settings