Clinical Trials
the ANRS CO21 " Extreme " Cohort (CODEX) (CODEX)
Verified March 2017 by French National Institute for Health and Medical Research-French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (Inserm-ANRS)
French National Institute for Health and Medical Research-French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (Inserm-ANRS)
Information provided by (Responsible Party)
French National Institute for Health and Medical Research-French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (Inserm-ANRS)
NCT01520844
First received: August 9, 2011
Last updated: March 21, 2017
Last Verified: March 2017
History of Changes
Purpose
A consortium of research teams has studied the immunovirological characteristics of these
patients:
The ANRS CO15 ALT cohort The ANRS CO18 HIV Controller cohort the ANRS EP47 VISCONTI study
Condition | Intervention |
---|---|
HIV Infection |
Biological : blood sampling |
Study Type: | Interventional |
Study Design: |
Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment Masking: None (Open Label) Primary Purpose: Other |
Official Title: | Multicentric Cohort of HIV Patient With Extrem Profil |
Further study details as provided by French National Institute for Health and Medical Research-French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (Inserm-ANRS):
Primary Outcome Measures
- clinical and immuno-virological [ Time Frame: up to 5 years ]
- mechanisms leading to the virus control and CD4 homeostasy with physiopathological studies [ Time Frame: up to 5 years ]
- impact of a prolonged untreated HIV infection, [ Time Frame: up to 5 years ]
- frequency of the "immunological escapes" (CD4 T cell decrease) or "virological escapes" (permanent or transient viral load increase) [ Time Frame: up to 5 years ]
- genetic characteristics of the patients and those of their viruses, the innate and adaptative immune responses directed against HIV and other viruses, the consequences of inflammation, and the characteristics of the loss of control [ Time Frame: up to 5 years ]
Estimated Enrollment: | 300 |
Study Start Date: | February 2012 |
Estimated Study Completion Date: | September 2019 |
Estimated Primary Completion Date: | February 2018 (Final data collection date for primary outcome measure) |
Arms | Assigned Interventions |
---|---|
Other:
Cohort study Blood sampling |
Biological:
blood sampling blood sampling |
Detailed Description:
Two cohorts of patients with a phenotype of HIV resistance exist in France. The ANRS CO15 ALT
cohort was set up in 1994. 71 patients were enrolled defined on immunological criteria: CD4 T
cell count above 600/mm3 with a stable or increasing count (positive or zero slopes) on at
least three consecutive exams performed during the last 5 years whatever the viral load was,
with a known HIV infection for at least 8 years. A consortium of research teams has studied
the immunovirological characteristics of these patients. After 16 years of follow-up, 6
patients are still actively followed. The main results have shown the lack of deletion in
viral genes nor any functional viral defects, a small size for the viral reservoir, and
distinctive genetic characteristics of the host (HLA, chemokines) which lead to potent immune
cell responses associated with virus control.
The ANRS CO18 HIV Controller cohort set up in 2009 is stemming from the French National
Observatory of HIV Controllers which was active between 2006 and 2008 (Study ANRS EP36). 152
patients are enrolled who are defined on virological criteria: the last 5 plasmatic viral
loads should be below 400 copies/mL without any antiretroviral treatment, in HIV-infected
patients for more than 5 years. A consortium of research teams has studied these patients and
has shown that Controllers are infected with replication-competent HIV, that HIV infects CD4
T cells but that the viral replication in CD4 T cells is fully controlled by CD8 T cells.
In addition, the ANRS EP47 VISCONTI study identified 14 patients who had been able to
maintain plasmatic viral loads below 400 copies/ml for more than 7 years in the absence of
antiretroviral treatment. Differently from HIV controllers, naïve of antiretroviral
treatment, the patients from the VISCONTI study started therapy within ten weeks of primary
infection and kept it for a median of three years before treatment discontinuation
(Post-Treatment Controllers or PTC). The initial analyses revealed important clinical and
immunogenetic differences between post-treatment and natural controllers, suggesting that PTC
were not naturally predispose to control infection and that they succeeded thanks to initial
therapeutic intervention. The mechanisms associated with long-term control in post-treatment
controllers also appear different from the main mechanisms identified in HIV controllers. The
main objective now is to gather in a common cohort patients with a particular resistance to
HIV infection, either with an immunological control (ALT) or a natural (HIV Controllers) or
induced virological control (PTC). The enrolled patients will be the patients already
enrolled in the cohorts CO15 and CO18, the ANRSEP47 VISCONTI study, and new patients. This
will allow common physiopathological studies to precise the mechanisms leading to the virus
control and CD4 homeostasy. A better knowledge of the mechanisms of viral control and immune
response preservation is very important in the setting of vaccine perspectives and in the
perspective of implementing new therapeutic interventions to induce remission of HIV
infection. This cohort will allow common research projects with common funding, a better
visibility both for clinicians who see patients with unusual phenotypes and for international
research. Such a cohort will be unique in the world by its size and the presence of these
three complementary groups of patients. The two main objectives for the " Extreme " cohort
(ANRS CO21 CODEX) are clinical and immunovirological. We wish to precise the impact of a
prolonged untreated HIV infection, to describe the frequency of the "immunological escapes"
(CD4 T cell decrease) or "virological escapes" (permanent or transient viral load increase),
and to identify predictive markers of HIV control. We wish to study the genetic
characteristics of the patients and those of their viruses, the innate and adaptative immune
responses directed against HIV and other viruses, the consequences of inflammation, and the
characteristics of the loss of control.
Eligibility
Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years to 85 Years | |
Sexes Eligible for Study: | All | |
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patient infected with HIV-1 and not co-infected with HIV-2
- Age ≥ 18 at enrollment
- Able to give written consent
- Covered by French Social Security
- accept the constraints imposed by the study
- without antiretroviral therapy for ALT, HIC and ALT HIC groups and a control of viral
ALT group: Documented HIV-1 seropositive for at least 8 years with a CD4 count above 600/mm3 with a rate stable or increasing (positive or zero slope) on at least three consecutive examinations performed during the last 5 years regardless of the viral load in the absence of antiretroviral treatment
HIC group: HIV-1 Seropositivity known for at least five years, asymptomatic, with the last 5 viral loads in HIV-RNA consecutive <400 copies / mL regardless of CD4 count in the absence of antiretroviral treatment
ALT HIC group: HIV-1 seropositive known for at least 8 years and CD4 cell counts greater than 600/mm3 with a rate stable or increasing (positive or zero slope) on at least three consecutive examinations performed during the last 5 years and with the last 5 viral loads in HIV-RNA consecutive <400 copies / mL in the absence of antiretroviral therapy.
PTC group: Patients with plasma HIV RNA > 2000 copies/mL before initiation of antiretroviral therapy. Treatment started during the primary infection (as defined by symptoms associated with seroconversion, as confirmed by a first negative ELISA and/or an incomplete P24-positive Western blot) or during the chronic phase of infection, and maintained for at least 12 months in both cases. Control of viral load after antiretroviral treatment interruption: patients must have at least two available viral load assays after stopping antiretroviral therapy. All viral loads must be <400 copies/mL for 12 months or more after stopping antiretroviral therapy, with the possible exception of one blip (one viral load above 400 copies/mL between two viral loads <400 copies/mL at least one month apart from the blip; in this case at least three viral load assays will be required). The last plasma viral load value at the time of inclusion must always be <400 copies/mL
Exclusion Criteria:
Under protection(saving) of justice
Contacts and Locations
Choosing to participate in a study is an important personal decision.Talk with your doctor and family members or friends about deciding to join a study. To learn more about this study, you or your doctor may contact the study research staff using the Contacts provided below.For general information, see Learn About Clinical Studies.Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01520844
Contacts
Contact: Olivier Lambotte, Professor | 01 49 59 67 54 | olivier.lambotte@bct.aphp.fr |
Contact: Faroudy Boufassa | 01 45 21 23 65 | faroudy.boufassa@inserm.fr |
Locations Show More
Sponsors and Collaborators
French National Institute for Health and Medical Research-French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (Inserm-ANRS)Investigators
Principal Investigator: | Olivier Lambotte, Professor | Kremlin Bicetre |
Study Chair: | Laurence Meyer, Professor | Methodologist INSERM CESP U1018 |
More Information
Responsible Party: | French National Institute for Health and Medical Research-French National Agency for Research on AIDS and Viral Hepatitis (Inserm-ANRS) | |
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT01520844 History of Changes | |
Other Study ID Numbers: | ANRS CO21 CODEX | |
Study First Received: | August 9, 2011 | |
Last Updated: | March 21, 2017 |
Additional relevant MeSH terms:
HIV Infections
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on April 19, 2018
This information is provided by ClinicalTrials.gov.