PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Weekends-off efavirenz-based antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected children, adolescents and young adults (BREATHER): Extended follow-up results of a randomised, open-label, non-inferiority trial.

  • Anna Turkova,
  • Cecilia L Moore,
  • Karina Butler,
  • Alexandra Compagnucci,
  • Yacine Saïdi,
  • Victor Musiime,
  • Annet Nanduudu,
  • Elizabeth Kaudha,
  • Tim R Cressey,
  • Suwalai Chalermpantmetagul,
  • Karen Scott,
  • Lynda Harper,
  • Samuel Montero,
  • Yoann Riault,
  • Torsak Bunupuradah,
  • Alla Volokha,
  • Patricia M Flynn,
  • Rosa Bologna,
  • Jose T Ramos Amador,
  • Steven B Welch,
  • Eleni Nastouli,
  • Nigel Klein,
  • Carlo Giaquinto,
  • Deborah Ford,
  • Abdel Babiker,
  • Diana M Gibb,
  • BREATHER (PENTA 16) trial Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. e0196239

Abstract

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BackgroundWeekends off antiretroviral therapy (ART) may help engage HIV-1-infected young people facing lifelong treatment. BREATHER showed short cycle therapy (SCT; 5 days on, 2 days off ART) was non-inferior to continuous therapy (CT) over 48 weeks. Planned follow-up was extended to 144 weeks, maintaining original randomisation.MethodsBREATHER was an open-label, non-inferiority trial. Participants aged 8-24yrs with virological suppression on efavirenz-based first-line ART were randomised 1:1, stratified by age and African/non-African sites, to remain on CT or change to SCT. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate the proportion of participants with viral rebound (confirmed VL≥50 copies/mL) under intent-to-treat at 48 weeks (primary outcome), and in extended follow-up at 96, 144, and 192 weeks. SCT participants returned to CT following viral rebound, 3 VL blips or discontinuation of efavirenz.FindingsOf 199 participants (99 SCT, 100 CT), 97 per arm consented to extended follow-up. Median follow-up was 185.3 weeks (IQR 160.9-216.1). 69 (70%) SCT participants remained on SCT at last follow-up. 105 (53%) were male, baseline median age 14 years (IQR 12-18), median CD4 count 735 cells/μL (IQR 576-968). 16 SCT and 16 CT participants had confirmed VL≥50 copies/mL by the end of extended follow-up (HR 1.00, 95% CI 0.50-2.00). Estimated difference in percentage with viral rebound (SCT minus CT) by week 144 was 1.9% (90% CI -6.6-10.4; p = 0.72) and was similar in a per-protocol analysis. There were no significant differences between arms in proportions of participants with grade 3/4 adverse events (18 SCT vs 16 CT participants; p = 0.71) or ART-related adverse events (10 vs 12; p = 0.82). 20 versus 8 serious adverse events (SAEs) were reported in 16 SCT versus 4 CT participants, respectively (p = 0.005 comparing proportions between groups; incidence rate ratio 2.49, 95%CI 0.71-8.66, p = 0.15). 75% of SAEs (15 SCT, 6 CT) were hospitalisations for a wide range of conditions. 3 SCT and 6 CT participants switched to second-line ART following viral failure (p = 0.50).ConclusionsSustainable non-inferiority of virological suppression in young people was shown for SCT versus CT over median 3.6 years. Standard-dose efavirenz-based SCT is a viable option for virologically suppressed HIV-1 infected young people on first-line ART with 3-monthly VL monitoring.Trial registrationEudraCT 2009-012947-40 ISRCTN 97755073 ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01641016.